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Catholic Intellectuals and the Challenge of Democracy
CATHOLIC INTELLECTUALS AND THE
CHALLENGE OF DEMOCRACY -------r�
JAY
P. CORRIN
UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DAME PRESS
Notre Dame, Indiana
University of Notre Dame Press Notre Dame, Indiana 46556 All Rights Reserved www.undpress.nd.edu Copyright © 2002 University of Notre Dame
Published in the United States of America Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Corrin, Jay P., 1943Catholic intellectuals and the challenge of democracy I Jay P. Corrin. p.
cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 978-0-268-15927-6 (paper) ISBN 978-0-268-02271-6 (hardcover) I.
Christianity and politics-Catholic Church-History-19th
century.
2. Democracy-Religious aspects-Catholic Church
History -19th century.
3. Christianity and politics-Catholic
Church-History -20th century.
4. Democracy-Religious aspects
Catholic Church-History-20th century. Bx1793 .c57
2002
261fo88'22-dc2r 2002006418
oo
This book is printed on acid-free paper.
I. Title.
This book is dedicated to the memory ofmy mother PATRICIA myfirst and best teacher
Contents
Acknowledgments Introduction CHAPTER
1X
I I
European Catholics Confront Revolution
9
2 The Development of Catholic Social Action in Nineteenth-Century England CHAPTER
CHAPTER
3
Leo XIII and the Principles of Rerum Novarum
59
CHAPTER 4 The Appearance of the "Chesterbelloc"
82
CHAPTER 5 Against the Servile State
n8
6 Distributism and British Politics
155
CHAPTER
7 The New Distributists CHAPTER
Vlll
Contents
CHAPTER
8
The Appeal of Fascism
r88
CHAPTER 9 Early Catholic Critics of Fascism
220
IO Social Catholicism and the Career of H . A. Reinhold
236
CHAPTER I I American Catholics Move to the Right
272
I2 The Religious Crusade in Spain
292
13 Against the Tide: The Catholic Critics o f Franco
331
CHAPTER 1 4 Completing the Circle
378
Notes
397
Bibliography
523
Index
543
CHAPTER
CHAPTER
CHAPTER
Acknowledgments
I
wish to extend my gratitude to those who have offered encour agement and provided thoughtful criticism in the making of this book. I am especially indebted to Rev. Robert A. Krieg, C.S.C., Professor ofTheology at the University of Notre Dame, and to James R. Langford, former director of the University of Notre Dame Press, for the enthusiastic support they gave my project. Pro fessors Jose Sanchez and Gordon Zahn read large portions of the early manuscript and offered valuable, insightful advice. My good friend Professor John Gagliardo of Boston University, whose com mand of German is legendary, was instrumental in illuminating dif ficult German colloquialisms in the letters of H. A. Reinhold and Waldemar Gurian. Discussions with Professor Stephen Collins of Babson College helped sharpen the focus of this study, placing it more clearly within the context of the historical issues central to modernization. I am very appreciative of the assistance given by a number of archivists who went beyond the call of duty to help me in the research for this book. Special thanks to John Atteberry, Senior Ref erence Librarian at Bapst Library, Boston College; Nicholas Scheetz, Manuscripts Librarian, Special Collections Division, Georgetown University; and Lyle Dorsett, former director of the Marion E. Wade Center, Wheaton College, Illinois. Throughout years of teaching at Boston University's College of General Studies my research and writing were supported by our late dean, Brendan Gilbane. His successor, Linda Wells, has continued this generosity and understanding. I thank them both. Portions of this book have appeared in The Chesterton Review, The Catholic Historical Review, and the Records of the American ix
x
Acknowledgments
Catholic Historical Society ofPhiladelphia. I thank their editors for granting me permission to reprint parts of these articles in the present revised form. I have had the good fortune of the steady hand of a perceptive editor, whose close reading and demanding standards immeasurably improved whatever qualities this book might possess. Thank you, Rebecca DeBoer, for guiding this manuscript to publication. Finally, I wish to acknowledge the unflagging support of Barbara Storella, whose efficiency of labor, charm, and all-around good cheer have made the Division of Social Science at Boston University's College of General Studies such a pleasant place to work. I also wish to thank my wife, Nancy, for everything she has had to put up with as I have labored to finish this project. Lamentably, despite all this help, whatever faults one finds in this book are my very own. Jay P. Corrin Bass Harbor, Maine
Introduction
T
his book describes the struggles of progressive and reac tionary Catholic intellectuals to adjust their religious views to the dynamics of social change, from the French Revo lution to the rise of the twentieth-century dictators. Those who tried to accommodate their faith with political and social democracy were the true precursors of what Pope John XXIII referred to as aggior namento, the task of bringing the Church up to date with the times. The Second Vatican Council (1962-1965) , convened by Pope John XXIII, called upon Catholics to broaden their historical per spectives, move beyond a static theology fixed to the past, and embrace the kinds of changes that would allow the Church to be more in step with contemporary society. Its invocations were not without pain and serious divisiveness, for many saw the dangers of taking the Church down the perilous paths of modernity.1 Part of the problem, it has been argued, was that the Church had to move too quickly through uncharted waters. The challenge of resolving the conflicting demands of religion and modernity by aggiornamento was forced on a community whose intellectual and spiritual bearing had become rigidified by tradition. Protestantism, on the other hand, had centuries of experience trying to accommodate itself to the culture of modernity. In the words of theologian Langdon Gilkey, Protestants had the good for tune to study the interaction of Christianity and modernity slowly over a period of some two hundred years, their theological structures having developed out of the very economic and political matrix that propelled modern social change in the first place: I
2 CAT H O L I C I N T ELLECTUALS AND T H E CHALLENGE O F D E M O C RACY
Catholicism . . . has really for the first time tried to absorb the effects of this whole vast modern development from the En lightenment to the present in the short period between 1963 and 1973! Thus all the spiritual, social, and technological forces that had structured and transformed the modern history of the West have suddenly, and without much preparation, impinged force fully on her life, and they have had to be comprehended, rein terpreted, and dealt with by Catholicism in one frantic decade. 2 Gilkey's assessment, however, is not entirely accurate, for it draws on the conventional view that the Catholic Church has always been the servant of right-wing reaction, fervently resisting change by virtue of its authoritarian structures and traditionalist theology.3 His judgment has certain validity when applied to the Vatican Curia, a good number of the Roman Catholic episcopacy, and conserva tive, even reactionary, Catholic intellectuals. Although it was indeed a challenge for the Catholic masses and tradition-bound clerics to embrace John XXIII's call for change in a single decade, a Catholic liberal, democratic tradition had already been in place for over two hundred years. In fact, the corpus of such thought not only prepared the ground for aggiornamento but also made it possible to implement the changes recommended by Vatican Council II.4 The antecedents of aggiornamento are rooted in an imaginative, progressive, and carefully reasoned Catholic response to the various social, economic, and political revolutions of the nineteenth century. This rich but unappreciated legacy reveals that the Church could not only accommodate itself to democratic culture but could even transform it in ways suitable to the needs of all social classes. This "liberal" Catholic response to modernity has gone largely unrecog nized by historians of our own day. 5 The so-called Catholic "third way," an alternative to the ex tremes of socialist collectivism and unfettered capitalism, was ini tially laid down in the writings of the Frenchman Frederic Ozanam, of Bishop Wilhelm von Ketteler of Germany, and of England's Car dinal Henry Edward Manning. Their insights concerning Catholi cism and industrial society informed the seminal social and political encyclicals of Pope Leo XIII.
Introduction 3
Yet from the beginning of the Church's efforts to address social change, there were contrary strains in Catholic thinking that worked against accommodation with democratic institutions. The liberal minded, pluralistic positions articulated by Ozanam, Ketteler, and Manning were offset by those of reactionary, "integralist" Catholics, who, rather than finding common ground with political and social revolution, sought a return to a hierarchical age of paternalistic authoritarianism. 6 This antidemocratic tradition, for a time, was largely overshadowed by the impetus given Catholic social action through the publication of Pope Leo XIII's encyclicals. In the English-speaking world, the Leonine social and political encyclicals matured most fully in the Distributist movement in spired by G. K. Chesterton and Hilaire Belloc. Contrary to the views of many historians, Distributism was not an oddity, out of step with modern culture, nor was it the mere whimsical infatuation of two clever publicists. In my view it represented the single most impor tant synthesis of Catholic social and political thinking to emerge in the English-speaking community in the early twentieth century, and its values had a telling impact on Catholic intellectuals in Britain and America. The more radical, democratic dimensions of Catholic social teaching were illustrated by the response of the Chesterton broth ers, Belloc, and their followers to the labor unrest that beset England in the turbulent decade before World War I. Labor's struggle against what Belloc called the "Servile State" brought together a number of disparate groups (radical liberals, anarchists, guild socialists, and Marxists) who recognized the need to unite against the drift towards monopoly capitalism as well as collectivism and, in the process, to prepare the ground for a new social order responsive to the needs of individuals. The battle against the Servile State played a seminal role in the development of anti-statist thinking in Great Britain, which in turn shaped various political movements on the left, from anarcho-syndicalism to guild socialism. In all, the struggle of the Chestertons and Hilaire Belloc against both big business and big government reveals the progressive, even radical lengths to which Catholic social teaching could be applied to modern economic and political problems.
4
CATH OLIC I N TELLECTUAL S AND TH E CHALLENGE O F D E M O C RACY
The thinking of the Chestertons, Belloc, and the Distributist movement was also conditioned by Hilaire Belloc's encounters with Parliament and Britain's governing establishment. His bitter �peri ences as a muckraking journalist and parliamentarian and his sense of being spurned as an academic pushed Belloc to the fringe, from liberalism to views akin to the antidemocratic positions of the con tinental integralist Catholics. Belloc's unfortunate encounters with what he called the "money powers," whom he believed controlled the political process, moved him to search for a man on a white horse, a strong heroic figure who could lead Christendom out of the swamp of greed and decadence to new heights of glory. Belloc found such men in Mussolini and Franco and essentially embraced their variants of fascism as acceptable alternatives to the danger of communism. G. K. Chesterton's vision, on the other hand, remained com paratively liberal and pluralistic, revealing its roots in the democratic traditions set down by Ozanam, Ketteler, and Manning. His un timely passing, however, combined with the growing Catholic pre occupation with the threat of international communism and the considerable influence of Hilaire Belloc, had the effect of splitting the Distributist movement and ultimately moving the journals that claimed its legacy into the camp of political reactionaries. The fate of the Distributist movement in Britain was a mirror image of events for Catholic intellectuals in America. Like Belloc and company (whose influence among American Catholics was paramount), numerous eminent Catholics in the United States be came obsessed with the spread of communism and enamored of Latin dictators. These sentiments created an atmosphere that of fered little tolerance for free or critical thinking, largely ignored the message of the papal social encyclicals, and ultimately alienated the American labor movement and the liberal intellectual community from Catholic social teachings. 7 Those who fought to keep the pluralistic traditions of the social encyclicals at the forefront of Catholic action were a distinct mi nority by the late 1930s, constantly besieged by their co-religionists on the political right who endeavored to present a monolithic image of Catholic conservatism to the outside world. Yet it was this liberal group of Catholic intellectuals who were the true upholders of the
Introduction 5
Distributist vision originally formulated by Chesterton and Belloc. One individual who seemed to best represent the liberal legacies of Ozanam, Ketteler, and Manning during the upheavals of the inter war years was the German refugee priest, Father Hans A. Reinhold. Reinhold and his friends (Virgil Michel, 0.S.B., Don Luigi Sturzo, Waldemar Gurian, George Shuster, and Jacques Maritain, among others) managed to see through the smoke screen of fascist corpo ratism that so beguiled conservative Catholics, and their analyses of the various programs of the dictators revealed how much such ini tiatives deviated from Catholic social teachings. Although Father Reinhold's social views may have been a model ofChestertonian-style Distributism (and I would assert that his con nections with the liturgical movement and Dorothy Day's Catho lic Worker group represented the clearest application of Distributist teachings to America) , the persecution he endured as a critic of totalitarian social and political ideas symbolized, on a personal level, the failure of Catholicism to engage the modern age. In the end, the liberal, pluralistic calls to economic and political reform first expressed by Ozanam and others were drowned out by the voices of reactionary Catholics who found guides in Hilaire B elloc and his circle. A critical chapter in the ongoing struggle between "integralist" and liberal Catholicism was played out in the Spanish Civil War. I maintain that the Catholic response in Britain and America to the tragedy of Spain was largely defined by Hilaire Belloc and his fol lowers. From the outset Belloc declared the conflict a religious cru sade against atheistic communism, one in which General Franco played the role of a latter-day El Cid holding back a wave of bar barism from engulfing Christendom. The Spanish Civil War was far more complex than the Catholic defenders of Franco claimed, but it soon became difficult, if not impossible, for liberal Catholics to suggest other ways of viewing the war. In the end the Bellocian line prevailed. Any reasoned, dispassionate discussion among Catho lics of the real social, political, and economic issues that wracked Spain was precluded once the struggle had been defined as a holy war. The failure of Catholics in the r92os and r93os to speak out with a united voice on the evils of fascism and the procrustean definition
6
CATHOLIC I N T ELLECTUALS A N D T H E CHALLENGE O F D E M O C RACY
of the Spanish Civil War as a holy crusade have contributed sig nificantly to the judgment that Catholicism is an agent of reaction, highly suspicious of democracy, liberalism, and state-directed social reform. 8 The Catholic Church, of course, has always provided a tent large enough to accommodate a myriad of traditions and con tentious ways of thinking about the secular world. It is therefore important to realize that during the era of the twentieth-century dictators a distinct Catholic tradition ofpluralistic political thought also existed, which championed radical social and economic reform and which, if given more institutional support during the interwar years, might have altered the one-dimensional, simplistic picture of Catholicism as socially conservative and inherently authoritarian. What follows is a study of political Catholicism. My purpose is not to explore the theological and spiritual dimension of this reli gion. The focus is rather political and sociological. I intend to both analyze and explicate how religion shaped the consciousness of a group of seminal Catholic thinkers as they responded to the pro cess of modernization, that is, to the forces for change unleashed by the combined experiences of social and political revolution that were the legacy of 1789 France, as well as of industrialism, capitalism, socialism, Marxism, and fascism. In this sense, the subject of the book moves beyond Catholicism itself, for it addresses a broader issue: religion as a vehicle for engaging in a positive and creative fashion the modern culture of the West. The views ofliberal Catho lics described here stand in sharp contrast both to a certain strain of conservativism, which essentially rejects modernity in favor of ways of living that arguably have limited practical application in the present world, and to postmodernism, which seems to deny the reality of modernization itsel£ I have chosen to focus on that influential man ofletters, Hilaire Belloc, as the emblem of right-wing Catholicism in the English speaking world. Belloc and his circle demonstrate why Catholicism is seen by historians as a force for political and cultural reaction. Hilaire Belloc also assumes a prominent profile in this study because of the enormous influence he had on British and American Catho lic political thought, a phenomenon relatively unnoticed by con temporary historians. Belloc and those who fell under his influence revealed a deep-seated revulsion against liberalism, cultural secu-
Introduction 7
larization, and parliamentary democracy. As an alternative, they essentially called for a return to medieval cultural values and found much to their liking in the syndicalist, authoritarian offerings of fascist-style political movements. The career of Father H. A. Reinhold, in juxtaposition to that of Hilaire Belloc, represents in this study the liberal side of the Catholic tradition. Unfortunately, Father Reinhold, much like the legacy of liberal Catholicism itself, never garnered the high public profile of a Hilaire B elloc and the reactionary positions that he represented. Yet Reinhold's liberal stands were firmly rooted in Catholic social and political teachings. Reinhold was typical of those few Catholic intellectuals whose voices of protest against tyranny and social injustice resisted the tide of tribal, reactionary politics. These were the Catholics who refused to either sit on the sidelines of history, as Guenter Lewy and others have claimed the Vatican itself did,9 or join the armies of Catholic militants, some of whom were political pragmatists who saw gains to be made from sup porting authoritarian regimes. The vast majority of these people had entered the marketplace of political advocacy, lost sight of Catholic moral doctrine, and essentially committed their own trahi son des deres by failing to judge fascism according to the dictates of natural law.10 The reluctance of such Catholics to follow the logic of their own moral tradition was frequently recognized and remarked upon by non-Catholics. The journalist Walter Lippmann, for instance, appreciated the frankness of Don Luigi Sturzo's critique of fascism, because, unlike so many other of his co-religionists, Sturzo realized that as a political creed the Italian totalitaro was a violation of Catholic political principles.11 In short, Catholic thinkers in the early decades of the twentieth century had access to a rich pluralistic religious tradition which could be drawn upon to address the challenges of modernity. More over, as the assaults against the Church increased throughout the twentieth century, many Catholics discovered in practice that even the legacy of political liberalism had something to offer in the battle against tyranny. Some recognized a certain symmetry between Catholicism and liberal philosophy, each capable of complement ing and giving strength to the other.12 This was the legacy to which the Vatican eventually gave its imprimatur after World War II. Prior
8 CATHOLIC I N T ELLECTUALS AND T H E CHALLENGE O F D E M O C RACY
to this, it must be emphasized, there was no doctrinal bias that pre cluded Catholics from accepting democratic, socially and economi cally progressive ideas. Nor were Catholics ever limited by religious teachings from joining movements or parties with progressive or even radical agendas. Indeed, there were sufficient ways to legiti mize such approaches through the broad corpus of Catholic social writings . Many influential conservative Catholics argued other wise, but they had no official theological sanction to substantiate the claim. Putting it another way, there was nothing intrinsic to Catholicism itself that precluded support for a liberal, democratic world order.13 The main objective of this study is to give voice to those Catho lics of the period under study who drew from their religious tradi tions a liberal and progressive approach to the problems of modern social change. This position has too often been unheard and there fore unappreciated and undervalued because of the more strident claims of Catholics on the political right. The telling of their story may help to modify the prevailing historical judgment of Catholi cism as a force for social and political reaction.
C H A PT E R 1
European Catholics Confront Revolution
T
he nineteenth century, a "Century of Revolution," inaugu rated an era of unprecedented economic expansion. By eman cipating individuals and social classes from paternalistic political orders, it became a golden age for European civilization. Yet the historical forces behind such change-the disintegration of the medieval order brought on by the accumulated blows of the Renaissance, Reformation, and Enlightenment culminating in the French Revolution-generated painful conflicts in values and social relationships. No institution was more directly challenged by these forces than that which had shaped the cultural ethos out of which European civilization had emerged: the Roman Catholic Church. The consciousness of nineteenth-century Europe had become trans
formed and, in the process, disenchanted and earth-bound. The "Modern Mind," wrote Peter Wust, "was secularized, the world stripped of its sacred meaning, the Church ruled out of public affairs, God dethroned in the soul of man."1 The cultural configuration of this new industrial age was shaped by the ascendancy of the bourgeoisie, a social class whose driving purpose was business and the amassment of material wealth. Theirs was a world where religion and spiritual values, presumably old fashioned sentiments that had no relevance to the marketplace, were relegated to drawing rooms or the Sunday musings of one's private life. Most significantly, the era was defined by the power of the state, a social institution that, beginning with the age of absolute mon archy and then finely-tuned by Robespierre and the J acobins, had come to dominate cultural and economic life. By the nineteenth century this institution was falling swiftly under the control of the 9
IO
CAT H O L I C I N T ELLECTUALS AND T H E CHALLENGE OF D E M O C RACY
middle classes, a new elite that both legitimated and rationalized its position through the canonization of capitalism. The nineteenth-century capitalist-driven economy reposed on the principle of individual freedom; its central belief was that each person must be free to pursue his own self-interest unfettered by governments or the prerogatives of privilege. The word "liberty," enshrined as religion, was the core idea of liberalism, the political philosophy of the bourgeoisie that made the practice of capitalism possible. The central premise of liberalism was that humans were benign, rational creatures who, if given freedom, could achieve self perfection by following the dictates of reason. Closely allied to liberalism was the creed of nationalism. Where liberalism fought against all domestic constraints that mitigated individual self-enhancement, nationalism demanded liberty for the group, asserting that the sovereignty of the people (popular democ racy), freed from the compulsions of other foreign powers, would assure the self-fulfillment and ultimate perfection of the nation state. Both nationalism and liberalism were legacies of the French Revolution. Furthermore, given the punishing anticlericalism that accompanied the overthrow of the old regime in France, the French Revolution also appeared to present a formidable opposition to the traditions of the Roman Catholic Church. Not surprisingly, many Catholic laymen and Church prelates were not prepared to endorse the cultural tendencies of the nine teenth century and had made common cause with aristocratic and monarchist elements in defense of dogma and privilege. Many of these conservative Catholics were also deeply troubled by the social problems brought on by the revolution in industry and politics, but they approached these issues from assumptions that were increas ingly irrelevant. The solution they advocated for the excessive indi vidualism that had left people at the mercy of the state and of industry was to resurrect a Church-dominated organic social order along medieval lines. For these Catholics the problem was mono causal and moral: the secularization of society had led to a permanent separation of politics and economics from religion. Their approach to resolving the challenges of modernity has been called Sozial refa rm by German scholars of Catholic social and political history. 2
European Catholics Confront Revolution 11
The French Church tended to be sympathetic to these senti ments, in particular the Gallican wing, which was nationalistic (that is, loyal to the old regime), monarchistic, aristocratic, and opposed to the rational legacies of the Enlightenment. This group was chal lenged by "liberal" French Catholics, essentially proponents of Sozialpolitik, meaning that they were prepared to recognize the gains of the French Revolution and reconcile the Church with democratic values. These Catholics were "ultramontane," prepared to go "beyond the mountain" to Rome; they appealed to papal authority in their struggle against conservative monarchist sympathizers within the French Catholic hierarchy. Liberal Catholics with Sozialpolitik lean ings recognized that the chief sacramental mission of the Church, the salvation of souls, required entering the temporal world as it was currently constituted. This was a demanding challenge, but many argued that the Church's mission could be more easily pursued within the democratic liberal state than under the inflexible abso lutist regimes of the past.3 The liberal nineteenth-century European Catholics also empha sized the Church's tradition of "social deaconry," a recognition that clergy, in addition to their sacramental responsibilities, also had an obligation to perform supplementary welfare work to improve the social life of the community.4 There was no necessary conflict be tween saving souls and engaging in social work, since the Church historically had been a central part of both the spiritual and tem poral realms. Yet since the mundane world, that which St. Augus tine called the "City of Man," was by its very nature flawed and imbued with sin, social deaconry could not be expected to achieve the perfection associated with the sacral community. Social dea conry should be guided by the ideals of Christian living but should direct its action toward present needs and be prepared to shift tac tics according to the requirements of the day. To such Catholics, the emergence of the liberal state was a historical reality with which the Church had a social responsibility to engage and contend. Rather than fleeing back into the past ( Sozialrefarm), liberal Catho lics were more interested in working with what might be salvaged in the present. In the words of the French Catholic Frederic Oza nam, the Church needed
12 CAT H O L I C I N T ELLECTUALS AND T H E CHALLENGE O F D E M O C RACY
to search out in the human heart all the secret cords which can lead it back to Christianity, to reawaken in it the love of the true, the good, and the beautiful, and finally to show in revealed faith the ideal of these three things to which every soul aspires; to regain, in short, the strayed spirits, and to increase the number of Christians.5 Ozanam, a devout Catholic layman and renowned scholar, was one of those who hoped to rekindle the social deaconry of the Church. 6 At the age of eighteen, in 1840, he published a pamphlet entitled Reflections on the Doctrine of Saint-Simon, a response to socialists who challenged Catholics to match words with deeds, in which he called upon his co-religionists to apply the message of the Gospels to ameliorate the conditions of the working poor. Church men, he wrote, must not only preach the truth of Christ but work for a "speedy improvement in the moral and physical condition of the most numerous class . . . . "7 Ozanam singled out economic lib eralism as the source of labor's misery. Its doctrines, he asserted, dehumanized the laborer by relegating his value to the impersonal laws of supply and demand, thereby transforming his person into a mere commodity of the marketplace. Ozanam went beyond criti cism to action after witnessing an armed revolt of weavers at Lyons in 1831. In 1833, while still a university student, he established the Society of St. Vincent de Paul, whose mission was to work for the welfare of the laboring classes in Paris. Many of Ozanam's contemporaries who shared this spirit of "Catholicism in action'' recognized the importance of becoming directly involved with the needs of the working classes, lest they be lost to the Church by falling prey to the rising voices of radical social revolution. A number of liberal Catholics in France became active in the labor movement, aiding the working classes in efforts to develop the solidarity necessary to defend themselves against the claims of capitalism. French liberal Catholics moved against their conservative adver saries in November 1831 when their leading spokesman, Felicite de Lamennais, made a pilgrimage to Rome and appealed directly to Pope Gregory XVI to support the reformist position. Gregory's response was swift and disappointing: his encyclical Mirai vos,
European Catholics Confront Revolution 13
issued on 15 August 1832, condemned Catholic liberal attempts to compromise with the age. The Pope denied that the Church had any need to regenerate itself or modernize, and he rejected the notion that liberty of conscience and freedom of the press were unqualified rights. This was a particularly crushing blow to Lamen nais, whose profound disappointment eventually led to his repudi ation of Catholicism. Despite Gregory's rejection of the principles of the liberal state, Catholic liberals continued their efforts to come to grips with the political issues of the day, especially as they concerned Church-state relations and the interplay between faith and reason. French liber als such as Count Charles de Montalembert, for instance, persist ently dismissed the notion that Catholics had anything to fear from freedom of ideas and liberty of conscience, since the Church had always held its own in the intellectual give-and-take that was part of the evolution of Western culture. Montalembert pointed out to his fellow Catholics that the recent resurgence of the faith in Bel gium, for example, was directly due to "liberty, nothing but liberty, and the struggle made possible by liberty." Political freedom, he asserted, "has been the safeguard and the instument of Catholic revival in Europe."8 Mirai vos in fact had little effect on the continued growth of nineteenth-century Catholic social action. None worked more dili gently to apply Christian teaching to labor problems than Frederic Ozanam, who, along with Bishop Wilhelm Emmanuel von Ketteler of Germany, established the groundwork for the Catholic social movement and was a major inspiration for Pope Leo XIII's great labor encyclical, Rerum Novarum (1891). Ozanam's Society of St. Vincent de Paul, whose "Conferences" eventually spread throughout Europe and became one the the world's largest organizations for the relief of poverty, had a purpose beyond simply alleviating the suffering of the poor. The Society was a means to an end: "our true aim," wrote Ozanam, "was to preserve intact in ourselves the Catholic faith in all its purity and to communicate it to others through the channel of charity. We wished to be able to answer those who, in the words of the Psalmist, asked of us: Ubi estDeus eorum?" (Where is their God?).9 Ozanam modeled his society on the worldwide organization of the Sisters of Charity, founded by Vincent de Paul in 1617; however,
14 CATHOLIC I N T ELLECTUALS AND T H E CHALLENGE O F D E M O C RACY
Ozanam's organization aimed to draw into its rank young men, mainly university students. The conferences of the Society of Vin cent de Paul became the training ground for Catholicism's next generation of social activists. In the words of Albert de Mun, they "were the great school of experience in which we first learned to serve the cause of the people. Out of them sprang the whole Catho lic Social Movement of the nineteenth century."10 Ozanam had begun his analysis oflabor and capital in response to the socialist followers of Saint- Simon, who had demanded to know how Catholicism could do anything positive to improve the lives of the working poor. His subsequent writings on the labor question went far beyond the analyses of the Saint-Simonians and reveal a level of sophistication and moral insight that compare more closely with Marx's critique of capitalism. It should be noted that Ozanam's early criticisms in Reflections on the Doctrine of Saint Simon, emerging fully in his university lectures after becoming a professor of literature at the Sorbonne, predated by some eight years the publication of Marx and Engels' Communist Manifesto, which appeared in February 1848.11 Like Marx, Ozanam had recognized that the ethos of unbridled capitalism, buttressed by the classical liberal ideas ofinfluential eco nomic philosophers such as Adam Smith, Thomas Malthus, David Ricardo, and Frederic Bastiat, was a powerful tool used to justify the rapacity of the economically strong. In Ozanam's view, the equally destructive and misguided socialist alternative to such exploitation, was, however, a logical response to the excesses of capitalism. Social ism, said Ozanam, simply was reaping the harvest of the transgres sions of liberalism. Ozanam, of course, condemned the debasement oflabor brought on by the wage slavery of industrial capitalism. Such degradation, however, was not in itself a unique occurrence. Labor had been degraded in the ancient world, where the tasks of production had been relegated to helots and slaves. A special virtue of Christianity (symbolized in the divine artisanry of]oseph and Jesus) was that it resurrected labor to the dignified position it deserved as the source of humankind's creative capacity. Ozanam, like Marx, recognized that capitalism had bifurcated the laboring process, that is, separated
European Catholics Confront Revolution 15
the cerebral dimension of work from its natural physical counter part. This was an inevitable outcome of the wage system. Labor, however, was of many kinds-physical, intellectual, and moral-and the evil of capitalism was that it had destroyed the unity of this natu ral productive process. Unlike Marx, Ozanam believed that the tra ditions of Catholicism could resuscitate the solidarity of the laboring process, much as it had existed in the guild society of the Middle Ages. What this demanded in the industrial era, asserted Ozanam, was just compensation to all those who produced. Capitalism re warded unfairly those with economic and intellectual power at the expense of the numerous classes who provided physical labor. The worker, Ozanam insisted, was entitled to a "just wage" that would provide for a decent living and the education of his children. Ozanam believed that adequate compensation was denied the worker because he lacked the ability to organize (since it was for bidden by the liberal state as a restraint of trade) and, at the same time, because he was being exploited by the owners of capital.12 Employers, he pointed out, had not considered "the worker as an associate and an auxiliary, but as a tool from which to derive as much service as possible at the least possible expense."13 The use of humans as tools of production-which Marx would later identify as the objectification of the laboring process-had profound moral impli cations, for it ultimately eroded the home and family. All this, said Ozanam, was the logical outcome of the liberal laissez-faire assump tions regarding political and economic affairs. What was to be done? Ozanam found the answer by embracing the most pervasive product of modernization: he turned to the power of the state. The government had both a moral and a social obliga tion to shape the economic order, since the absolute liberty of capital led to exploitation oflabor and spawned conditions for violent social revolution. This was a revolutionary proposal in an era that ana thematized the idea of state intervention. But unlike conservative Catholic philosophers who longed for the return of absolutist forms of government, Ozanam saw no role for a paternalistic state. Com mand economies of the past had only constricted industry and com merce, and for this reason Ozanam rejected not only mercantilist economics but also socialism as solutions to the modern industrial
16 CATHOLIC I N T ELLECTUALS AND T H E CHALLENGE O F D E M O C RACY
problem. He proposed, instead, a balanced approach, a middle way between the requirements of freedom and authority, undertaken by a government that would carefully weigh the needs of both man agement and labor before taking action and would act only when the common welfare required it. Ozanam's solution to the excesses of laissez-faire liberalism presaged the position articulated by John Stuart Mill's On Liberty, which did not appear until 1859 and is rec ognized today as the classic justification for the interventionist state in the Anglo-Saxon liberal tradition. In the final analysis, however, Ozanam did not regard the prob lems of modernity as primarily economic or political in origin. The age lacked charity and economic justice, but the latter could never be restored without universal goodwill and brotherly love. Ozanam provided an important message to his fellow Catholics: charity required taking an active role in relieving the social problem. He put the issues most succinctly in a letter to his friend Lallier in 1836: The question which agitates the world to-day is not a question of politicalfarms, but a social question; if it be the struggle of those who have nothing with those who have too much, if it be the violent shock of opulence and poverty which is making the ground tremble under our feet, our duty, as Christians, is to throw ourselves between these irreconcilable enemies, and to induce one side to give in order to fulfill the law, and the other to receive as a benefit; to make one side cease to exact, and the other to refuse; to render equality as general as it is possible amongst men; to make voluntary community of possession replace taxation and forced loans; to make charity accomplish what justice and law alone can never do.14 The above passage displays Ozanam's prescient sociological analysis as well as his faith in charity. At least a decade before the appearance of the Communist Manifesto (1848), Ozamam recognized that divisions between men were linked to economic disparities and warned of class war unless social programs were initiated to miti gate such inequities. The approach to social amelioration suggested by Ozanam required that Catholics-those with any measure of power or
European Catholics Confront Revolution 17
privilege-make a fundamental political reorientation. This would mean "passing over to the barbarians," as he put it, that is, embrac ing the causes of the majority of the people in order to draw them into the Church. Catholics must occupy themselves with those "whose rights are too few," who justifiably cry out for a share in pub lic affairs, and who require guarantees for work and protection from distress. Ozanam's call to embrace the struggle of the masses antici pated what Marx described as the historical mission of the "lib erated" bourgeoise to join the revolutionary cause of the proletariat. Ozanam's call for Catholic action demanded courage and com mitment, something Ozanam himself possessed in abundance. He never let a day pass without taking time from his schedule of teach ing, scholarship, and journalistic endeavors to work among the poor for the Society of St. Vincent de Paul. Catholics had nothing to fear from the calling of the social deaconry: "Do not be frightened when the wicked rich, irritated by your pleading, treat you as communists. They treated St. Bernard as a fanatic and a fool. Remember that your fathers, the French priests of the eleventh and twelfth cen turies, saved Europe by the Crusades; save her once more by the cru sade of Charity, and, as it involves no bloodshed, be you its first soldiers. "15 For Ozanam, however, "crossing over to the people" meant embracing certain political forms, in particular, democratic partici patory government, which offended conservative Catholics. In the context of his own times, this arrangement was best represented in republicanism. Ozanam saw no inherent incompatibility between liberty and Christianity, and, for this reason, he labored to effect a reconciliation between the two; the one was a force for social and intellectual dynamism, the other a bonding agent creating the unity that would allow society to govern itself. Until the end of his life, even during the storm of working-class unrest in the French Revo lution of 1848, Ozanam was convinced that a republic was the best form of government, indeed, the one toward which all enlightened nations were tending; and since the people were to become sover eign, it was all the more important that they be reconciled with Christianity. Ozanam believed that freedom was complementary to both the republic and the Church. Political liberty was necessary for developing the full creative powers of the individual citizen, and
18
CATHOLIC I N T E LLECTUALS A N D T H E CHALLENGE O F D E M O C RACY
freedom for the Church, liberated from the bondage of the state, would allow her to provide the teaching, guidance, and the requisite moral rules for the spiritual happiness of the community. "My knowledge of history," said Ozanam, "leads me to the conclusion that in the nature of mankind democracy is in the final stage in the development of political progress, and that God leads the world in that direction. "16 Ozanam's historical theory of governmental evolution and his progressive views on politics and the social deaconry of the Church drew him into an ongoing battle on two fronts, which he waged with indomitable courage until the end of his life. On the one hand, his devout Catholicism rendered his position at the Sorbonne a diffi cult one, that institution having been aggressively anti-Christian, for half a century. By the time he arrived at the Sorbonne, Ozanam, through his careful scholarship, was well aware of the enormous debt that Western civilization had owed the Catholic Church. In his courses he unabashedly focused on the Christian background to European political and literary development. But Ozanam's Chris tian forbearance and toleration toward those who opposed his Catholi cism, combined with his pro-republicanism, brought down upon him the wrath of conservative Catholics. The battle against Catho lic monarchists became particularly heated during the Revolution of 1848, which Ozanam recognized as fundamentally a social revo lution and part of the historical evolution to republican democracy. In order to counteract the enormous influence of such Catho lic conservative publications as the Univers and provide a forum for more advanced social and political views, Ozanam and Jean Bap tiste Henri Dominique Lacordaire founded the newspaper L'Ere Nouvelle ("The New Era") in April 1848 . The publication's chief objective was to show how Catholicism could be reconciled with republicanism and thereby wean the increasingly revolutionary work ing classes from radical socialism to Christianity. Ozanam's articles pleaded with clergy and the rich to "seek the justice of God and the welfare of the Country'' by searching out the poor and preaching the gospel; he also called on Christians to become more actively engaged in the political process by standing for election to the National Assembly. The current danger with labor unrest could have been
European Catholics Confront Revolution 1 9
avoided, he argued, if Catholics had been more responsible about the social question in the first place. As Ozanam wrote his brother, "If a greater number of Christians, and above all priests, had but occupied themselves with the working class these last ten years, we should be more secure of the future, and all our hopes rest on that little that has been done in this direction up to the present."17 When it became clear that the French Republic would collapse by the spring of 1849, and after unceasing vituperative attacks from the Univers (which called Ozanam's paper "I.:Erreur Nouvelle") and other conservative Catholic quarters, Ozanam's journalistic efforts for a Christian Republic came to a close. In April 1849, a year after it was founded, L'Ere Nouvelle ceased publication. With the support of the archbishop of Paris, Ozanam's supporters founded another journal, Moniteur Religieux, but Ozanam was in ill health and unable to contribute to their efforts. Frederic Ozanam's brilliant career ended prematurely in 1853 when he died at the age of forty. II
Another nineteenth-century pioneer of modern Catholic social action was Baron Wilhelm Emmanuel von Ketteler, Bishop of Mainz.18 Ketteler responded to the political and industrial issues of his day by advocating what he calle d "true communism." This was intended to be an alternative to the most radical synthesis of nineteenth century socialism: Marx and Engels' Communist Manifesto. Ketteler condemned many of the same evils as had Marx and Engels and, in a fashion similar to their critique of capitalism, identified the eco nomic causes of poverty and the exploitation of labor. But Ketteler argued that these social ills were derivative of a larger problem that socialists ignored, the evil of sin: The most fatal error of our time is the delusion that mankind can be made happy without religion and Christianity. There are certain truths which cling together like the links of a chain: they cannot be torn asunder because God has joined them. Among these truths are the following:
20 CATHOLIC I NTELLECTUALS A N D T H E CHALLENGE O F D E M O C RACY
There is no true morality without God, no right knowledge of God without Christ, no real Christ without his Church. Where the Church is not, there true knowledge of God per ishes. Where true knowledge of God is not, there morality suc cumbs in the struggle with sin, with selfishness and sensuality, with the lust of the eyes, the lust of the flesh, and the pride of life. But where morality is not, there is no means left of mak ing people happy and prosperous. In such a state men are ruled by their passions. They are the slaves of the tyrants of avarice and lust, in whose service the powerful oppress the weak, and the weak in their turn rise up against the powerful, and if they conquer, become the willing tools of the self-same tyrants, their passions. War without end will be waged between the rich and the poor; peace on earth among them is impossible. Intimately, inseparable, is the welfare of the people bound up with religion and morality.19 From his early years as a priest, Ketteler had been absorbed by the problems of poverty among the working class and had given considerable sums from his family inheritance to charitable causes. His reputation, however, quickly became that of a social reformer. As Europe was tom apart by revolutions in 1848, Ketteler, at the time parish priest of Hopsten, was elected unanimously by both Catho lics and Protestants in his district to the Frankfurt National As sembly. This body had the task of drawing up plans for unification of the German states. As a member of the Assembly, Ketteler showed an aggressiveness on social and industrial issues that brought blushes to the faces of conventional bourgeois Catholic representatives. Kettler made his reputation as a voice for "revolution'' and, at the same time, gave birth to the Catholic social movement in Germany by a series of six sermons he delivered at Mainz during Advent, 1848, entitled "The Great Social Qyestion ofOur Time." The purpose of these sermons was to awaken Catholics to the problems of Ger many's new industrial society. Rather than focusing on artisans, journeymen, and the semi-skilled workers of pre-industrial society as had Catholic Romantics and traditionalists, Ketteler initiated a new approach to the social problem by addressing the needs of the
European Catholics Confront Revolution 21
urban proletariat. He urged Catholic thinkers to look beyond obso lete medieval guild approaches to social dynamics and seek new paths that would have practical application to an industrial setting. This would require forsaking the old alliance with political reaction and establishing, instead, a new working relationship with progres sive social forces. Along with Ozanam, Ketteler was one of the few men of his day to recognize the full significance of the working-class movement that was beginning to break out across Europe, and much of his writing on the subject was directed to the radical chal lenge of capitalism posed by the Communist Manifesto. Ketteler pursued his study of the social problem with an open mindedness that was far beyond the appreciation of his Catholic peers or his liberal and socialist adversaries. He drew extensively from Engels' studies on the conditions of the laboring classes, cor responded lengthily with the socialist Ferdinand Lassalle, whose ideas on workers' cooperatives were of great interest to him, and sought advice on Church-state relations from Protestant and con servative social philosophers. The opening salvo of Ketteler's famous Mainz sermons was aimed at liberalism's laissez-faire doctrine of unlimited competition and its position regarding the absolute rights of private property. His ideas on the social problem were developed more fully in a major book published in 1864, The Labor Question and Christianity. At this point, Ketteler had become Bishop of Mainz, and since it was a nov elty for a bishop to write on labor issues, the book itself became quite a sensation, going through three editions in the first year of publi cation alone. The Labor Question and Christianity attacked the liberal sacred cows of economic competition and unrestricted rights to property by drawing on principles set down by St. Thomas Aquinas. Argu ing along lines established by the great scholastic theologian some six hundred years earlier, Ketteler asserted that the liberal concept of property as an exclusive right was a perversion of the Christian tradition of proprietorship, a crime against nature, since property and all the creatures of the earth ultimately belonged to God alone. Man's use of property could never be unrestricted; indeed, in such circumstances "property is theft," said Ketteler, because man has an
22 CATHOLIC I N T ELLECTUALS AND T H E CHALLENGE O F D E M O C RACY
obligation to God to utilize ownership responsibly. In effect, all property rights are derived from God and those who possess it have the burden of usufruct, an obligation to use it for the sustenance of the entire community. This is what Ketteler meant by "true com munism," as opposed to the materialist version advocated by Marx and Engels. As St. Thomas established in Summa Theologica (II-II, 66, r and 2) , the fruits of private property are not exclusive; they are the common property of all and thus should be shared with others according to their needs. Ketteler also opposed the political agenda of liberalism because, in his view, it was simply a new form of absolutism20 cloaked in the robes of the goddess of liberty. Modern liberals, like their Jacobin predecessors, justified legislative intrusions into the lives of ordi nary citizens and their invasion of clerical jurisdiction by invoking Rousseauistic ideas about the "general will," sovereignty of "the people," and the legitimacy of popular elections. In fact, argued Ket teler, this was a disguise, a ploy to exercise absolute political power, made easier by manipulating public opinion and the power of the ballot box. Liberals talk about the sanctity of the vote, wrote Ket teler, but what this means is "going to the voting booth every couple of years for a few minutes to scratch a name on the ballot; in other words, to elect one's own taskmaster. Thereafter the taskmaster acts in the name of the people . . . . "21 Ketteler's antidote to this "false Lib eralism" and its handmaiden, the omnipotent state, was a govern ment oflaws, one which guaranteed the basic liberties of the natural corporate bodies (such as merchant classes, professional groups, workers, academicians, and churches) that provide the essential ser vices upon which society depends. Ketteler's criticism of the liberal position on private ownership and government, however, was balanced by a powerful condemna tion of socialism. Nineteenth-century socialism was not only athe istic but, like liberalism, tended toward absolutism in its quest for control of the state; its purpose was to impose collectivist uniformity in the interests of a single group that would deny liberty to its class enemies. In many respects, liberalism and socialism were simply opposite sides of a coin. Both sought the power of state not to advance the commonweal but to promote the interests of their particular constituents. As Ketteler put it: "liberalism laughed at
European Catholics Confront Revolution 23
eternity and said the socialists laughed with them, declaring 'we laugh with you, but if this life is all there is, why should ninety per cent be excluded from enjoying what the ten percent possess?' "22 Although Ketteler criticized the excesses of liberal concepts and practices concerning proprietorship, he appreciated the importance of individual ownership of property: it brought personal security, encouraged responsibility, good management, and pride in work manship, and was the source of mankind's creativeness. For these reasons, Ketteler objected to the economic programs of radical socialists like Marx and Engels. He agreed with their desires to restore labor's rightful dignity and true value as the central factor in the productive process. But Ketteler strongly opposed socialist means to this end, namely, the forcible confiscation of property and the transfer of ownership of the means of production to the state. Ketteler knew that coercive measures to destroy the instruments of exploitation also would eliminate the very freedom that was at the source oflabor's creativity. As for himself, Ketteler wrote that "Even if all the Utopian dreams of the Socialists were realized and every one was fed to his heart's content in this universal labor State, I should, for all that, prefer to eat in peace the potatoes that I grow myself, and to clothe myself with the skins of animals reared by me, and befree-than to live in the slavery of the labor State and fare sumptuously." This is what made socialism so dangerous and loath some. Collectivist theory, in practice, would bring slavery back to life again. The collectivist state, warned Ketteler, is "an assemblage of slaves without personal liberty."23 In order to deal with modern social problems effectively, Ket teler argued, it was necessary to examine carefully the two ways in which people have created social solidarity. One way is to structure society mechanically. In such an arrangement the unifying force is external, binding people together on a pragmatic or utilitarian basis. However, said Ketteler, this method lacks enduring internal prin ciples. The other alternative is to bring order organically, allowing the practice of convention and communitarian traditions (social organisms) to form the bonding agents for solidarity. Such a pro cess comes about through natural growth (naturwuchsig), develop ing out of the nature of things, that is, out of the character of the customs and experience of time. Organic unity, Ketteler insisted, is
24 CATHOLIC I N T ELLECTUALS A N D T H E CHALLENGE OF D E M O C RACY
less transitory than that brought about by mechanical, impersonal structures, for it represents a higher plane of existence; natural organisms have within them an inner and personal unifying force that nurtures and binds all parts of a community into one "over riding individuum." It was Ketteler's conviction that political order based on corpo rations (modeled on the medieval guilds) corresponded closely to organic solidarity. Therefore he recommended the creation of a cor porative political structure. The personal, intimate, and economi cally purposive ways in which it functioned as a Volksgemeinschaft (the nation as community) offered the best opportunities for indi vidual political representation and better self-government: "Corpo rate bodies seem to me to be like living bodies and life organisms that are structures according to the natural order of things whose bond is not merely external, transient and accidental, but internal and natural."24 On the other hand, political forms recommended by liberals and democratic socialists, in particular constitutional government and representative bodies that would bring delegates together on the basis of geographical regions, corresponded closely to mechanical solidarity, and were potentially less stable, since they tried to create solidarity by forcing natural groups into an artificial union (the state) and, most importantly, tended to encourage par tisan interests. The efforts to create order through rational mechanisms had led to the dissolution of "natural organizations," such as the guilds, and no group suffered more from this than the laboring classes. The medieval corporations, Ketteler argued, had given them protection through an organizing principle that allowed for the full develop ment of personality. But with the growth of industrialism, accom panied by the liberal concept of laissez-faire economics, the workers, without wealth and structures of association, were at the mercy of capitalists and the naked power of the state. Consumed by his help lessness, "the workman is only too ready to join any and every move ment that promises to help him, and to throw himself into the arms of every fool or lying demagogue."25 For these reasons, Ketteler advocated a reorganization of the prevailing industrial system based on cooperative production asso ciations under the ownership and management of the workers
European Catholics Confront Revolution 25
themselves. What Ketteler had in mind was a corporative industrial scheme that had many of the characteristics of the medieval guilds. Although the old guild system had its faults and abuses, owing largely to its failure to adapt to the emergence of a market economy, Ketteler believed that its positive attributes-the integration of the worker into the productive order, giving him dignity and status could be modified and incorporated into the new industrial order. What had been lost in the destruction of the guilds was any guar antee of security for the individual worker. Hence modern wage earners were organizing for united action to make their just claims against the owners of capital. Ketteler supported these efforts and insisted that the Church must wholeheartedly sanction the process. Christianity, said Ketteler, possessed certain truths that could impart the vigor and bonding necessary for workingmen's associations: When men combine in a Christian spirit, there subsists among them, independently of the direct purpose of their asso ciation, a nobler bond which, like a beneficent sun, pours out its light and warmth over all. Faith and charity are for them the source of life and light and vigor. Before they came together to attain a material object, they were already united in this tree of life planted by God on earth; it is this spiritual union that gives life to their social union. In a word, Christian associations are living organisms; the associations founded under the auspices of modern Liberalism are nothing but agglomerations of indi viduals held together solely by the hope of present mutual profit or usefulness. The future of unionism belongs to Christianity. The an cient Christian corporations have been dissolved and men are still zealously at work trying to remove the last remnants, the last stone, of this splendid edifice; a new building is to replace it. But this is only a wretched hut-built upon sand. Christianity must raise a new structure on the old foundations and thus give back to the workingmen's associations their real significance and their real usefulness.26 Along with his proposals for the creation of a corporativist industrial order, Ketteler took a strong public stand in support of
26 CATHOLIC INTELLECTUALS AND T H E CHALLENGE OF D E M O C RACY
labor's demand for higher wages. This was justified in the face of economic liberalism's degradation of labor to the level of a com modity and its tendency to look "on man himself, with his capacity for work, simply as a machine bought as cheaply as possible and driven until it will go no more."27 Although a living wage was a basic necessity for labor, Ketteler was aware that the worker needed more than mere wages for his economic well-being. In this respect, Ket teler had been swayed by Ferdinand Lassalle's "iron law of wages," which stated that those who rely exclusively on wages are inevitably driven by competition to the level of bare subsistence. Ketteler rec ognized the need to transform the workers into owners. This could not be done through "self-help," as the liberals had argued, because the mass of workers were too poor to generate the necessary capital to achieve and maintain ownership as individuals. The workers would need the unity of numbers to reach this goal; Ketteler advocated the restoration of a guild order because he believed it had the greatest potential to provide workers with the opportunity of ownership, a responsibility they ultimately could share with management. Bishop Ketteler was far ahead of his episcopal cohorts in advo cating the application of social deaconry to the issues of modern society. He played an active and seminal role in organizing skilled workers in the Catholic Workers League, forerunner of the later Christian Trade Union movement. Ketteler saw no reason why the Catholic Church should stand apart from labor's efforts to union ize simply because the drive was being promoted by anti-Christians: It would be a great folly on our part if we kept aloof from this movement merely because it happens at the present time to be promoted chiefly by men who are hostile to Christianity. The air remains God's air though breathed by an atheist, and the bread we eat is no less the nourishment provided for us by God though kneaded by an unbeliever. It is the same with unionism: it is an idea that rests on the divine order of things and is essentially Christian, though the men who favor it most do not recognize the finger of God in it and often even turn it to a wicked use.28 In addition to his proposals for reforming the industrial order, Ketteler's most important contribution to the growth of Catholic
European Catholics Confront Revolution 27
social action was his insistence that the Church make an effort to train clergy more effectively to meet the needs of the working classes. Churchmen, he insisted, had to be informed about the social and economic conditions of the laboring poor, educated in economics and sociological theory, and acquainted with welfare policies and programs: The labor question cannot be ignored any longer in the courses of Philosophy and Pastoral Theology in our seminaries. It would be an important step in the right direction if a certain number of ecclesiastics could be induced to make a special study of political economy. They would have to be provided with trav eling allowances to enable them to study labor conditions on the spot and to gain personal knowledge of the welfare institutions already in existence. The results of their investigation and obser vations would be communicated to their brethren in the min istry to periodic conferences established for the purpose.29 The German bishops meeting at the Fulda Conference in 1869 formally accepted Ketteler's recommendations on the social ques tion, and the Twentieth Catholic Congress, meeting at Dusseldorf at the same time, unanimously accepted these principles and reform proposals, adopting them as the basis for all subsequent German Catholic social action. By the end of an eminent career which had earned him the ap pellations "Bishop of the Workingman'' and "The Fighting Bishop," Ketteler had come to the conclusion that although a reconstructed industrial order had to be morally guided by the social deaconry of the Church, and its redistribution of property undertaken only if there were a society-wide "interior regeneration of the heart,"30 it could be put into the flesh only with the intervention of the state. In particular, governments must assume the task of giving legal protection to labor's struggle to create corporative enterprises . Ketteler's ideas on labor associations were rooted in the medieval notion of "estates," where each profession and productive unit- corporation-was self-governing and participated equally in the cre ation of national policy. He was convinced that these would mitigate the class divisiveness encouraged by Marxists. Ketteler outlined five
28
CATHOLIC I N T E LLECTUALS A N D T H E CHALLENGE O F D E M O C RACY
conditions vital for a guild order based on vocations: "They must be natural growths, not simply creations of the State; they must be for economic ends and avoid political entanglements; they must have a moral basis and develop a corporate conscience; they must include all the members of the same class (vocation); and they must combine self-government and legal regulation in reasonable proportions."31 In 1873 Ketteler published a Christian political program for the German Center Party which appeared under the title The Catholics in the German Empire. Here he outlined a number of tasks the state should undertake which included, among other things, developing laws to protect worker's cooperatives, compensation for the disabled, prohibitions against child labor in factories, legal regulation of work ing hours, and government inspection of factories. In the spirit of the Christian guild society of old, Ketteler also reminded laborers that they had mutual obligations to owners of capital. The workers must moderate their demands, and if they are to escape the danger of becoming mere tools in the hands of ambitious and unscrupulous demagogues, if they wish to keep clear of the inordinate selfishness which they condemn so severely in the capitalist, they must be filled with a lofty moral sense, their ranks must be made up of courageous, Christian, religious men. The power of money without religion is just as great an evil. Both lead to destruction. 32 Ketteler's revolutionary social teachings were a major target in the Kulturkampf initiated by Chancellor Otto von Bismarck in an effort to subordinate the Catholic Church to the will of the newly formed German national state, a battle which contemporary ob servers viewed as a struggle between two opposing cultures. Ketteler was accused by Bismarck of creating what the chancellor called "political dualism," that is, of setting up a "State within a State" by forcing Catholics to follow the dictates of the "Papist" German Center Party. The autocratic Bismarck made these claims in order to discredit the patriotism of a powerful interest group that could challenge his imperious political agenda. In fact, Ketteler's concern was that Catholic rights not be destroyed by the new powers of a
European Catholics Confront Revolution 29
German imperial government. His answer to such threats was a rec ommendation that Catholics organize through a strong political party, for only then would the imperial authorities listen to Catho lic ideas on political and social reform: "We must organize in such a manner that every Catholic, whether burgher or peasant, will be perfectly acquainted with our demands and ready to champion them boldly and resolutely in his own particular sphere of activity. In this way alone can we hope to gain the influence to which we are entitled."33 Ketteler, however, was not proposing an exclusive Catholic pro gram; he insisted that his principles spoke for all religious bodies that required protection under the law. The sociopolitical positions to which Bismarck referred were outlined in Ketteler's The Catho lics in the German Empire. This treatise actually was written near the end of the Franco-Prussian War of 1870 and was unknown to the Center Party until it was published in the spring of 1873, proving, of course, that the program was not drafted by Center Party politi cians. An analysis of its contents reveals that Ketteler was simply proposing a set of guidelines that would protect the basic democratic rights of all Christian religious groups, guarantee public laws, assure the principles of federalism, and safeguard individual and corporate liberty against the potentially statist claims of the German Empire. These guidelines were laid out in the spirit of political plural ism, Ketteler having carefully spelled out the need to guarantee the autonomy of a multitude of interest groups in a society that had become increasingly infatuated with the powers of "blood and iron'' political techniques. In this context Ketteler saw an extremely dan gerous situation developing: the increasing powers of the state "vested in a bureaucratic officialdom," on the one hand, and the atomization of society caused by the breakdown of rural, closely knit community life due to rapid urbanization and industrialization, on the other hand, had created a condition in which isolated indi viduals were engaged in unbridled competition under the sole con trol of industrial capitalists, an absolute monarch, or an equally absolute parliamentary government. Throughout this process, "the worker was isolated and left to his individual resources while the money power : . . was centralized. The working class was atomized
3 0 CATHOLIC I N T ELLECTUALS AND T H E CHALLENGE O F D E M O C RACY
into individual particles, so to speak, with each individual powerless by himsel£"34 It was imperative, in Ketteler's mind, that the Ger man working and peasant classes organize into self-governing cor porations to protect their own interests. These advanced proposals for sociopolitical reform were put forth when Germany's socialist movement was still in its infancy (the Social Democratic Party was not formed until May 1875), and Ketteler's recommendations were so progressive that they seemed foreign to the thoughts of average Catholics. Ketteler appreciated the unlikelihood that his programs would be given serious consid eration by the state, and he knew his ideas were probably even too radical for most bourgeois German Catholics: We do not expect our program to be accepted on the spot, or even in the near future; our actions, however, are not governed by the passing needs of the hour and the fluctuations of the Zeit geist, but by eternal principles, upon which alone the peace and happiness of nations are based and which, after seasons of revo lutionary upheaval, always rise to the surface again. 35 The accommodation of Catholics to political reality initiated by Ketteler-that is to say, acceptance of capitalism and the modern state (Sozialp olitik) was brought to fruition by his disciple, Father Franz Hitze. Although Hitze was a distinguished professor at the University of Muenster and later a monsignor, his real love was the rough-and-tumble world of politics, where as a member of the Cen ter Party he became a powerful advocate for labor in the German Reichstag. Hitze was converted to the cause of social deaconry and prac tical social reform after witnessing firsthand the injustice and grind ing poverty of the working class while serving as a young chaplain in the industrial town ofMuenchen-Gladbach. Like Ketteler, Hitze came to appreciate the strengths of Germany's secular and Protes tant traditions and, given the minority status of Catholicism, the impossibility of reconstructing modern society along clerical lines. He therefore focused his energies on a pragmatic approach to the problems, trying everything permissible within the spirit of the -
European Catholics Confront Revolution 3 1
Gospels to forge the best deal possible for labor within the social and political conditions of the day. Hitze narrowed his goal to that which was possible. He created educational opportunities for Catholic workers by helping to estab lish the " Volksverein fuer das katholische Deutschland," and he encouraged Catholic labor action by involving workers in the broader-based, interconfessional Christian Social Workmen's Asso ciations, of which he became the chief inspiration and organizer in 1882. Out of this grouping was formed the Federation of Christian Trade Unions, which worked for constructive social reforms well into the era of the Weimar Republic. The significance of Hitze's career is that he was successful in encouraging Catholics to become integrated into an ever-changing capitalist world order. By doing so he assured that German Catholics would not be marginalized from mainstream society, and he helped provide them with realistic op portunities to shape their social and political environment accord ing to Christian principles. Solving the "social question," in Hitze's mind, required an eco nomic system that was adaptive to modern methods of production and integrated with modern values. Like his mentor Ketteler, Hitze rejected liberal capitalism, where the powerful preyed upon the weak; a distrust of bureaucracy and centralization also led him to deny the efficacy of state socialism. "Guild socialism," claimed Hitze, was the best solution to the modern social question. By this he meant the application of a modified medieval guild system to indus trial production. Such a system would be more broadly based eco nomically and far more democratic than that of the Middle Ages. However, a partial or voluntary application of the guild program would not be sufficient; it would be a feeble weapon for breaking through the "iron law" of wages. Hitze insisted that the guilds would have to be compulsory for all industries, trades, professions, and areas of agricultural production. Hitze's proclamation of the prin ciple of "society reform through social policies"-the principle that the political parties must work for social improvement in tandem with the people, government, and prevailing economic conditions represented the logical culmination of Ketteler's melioristic, prag matic Sozialpolitik in action. 36
3 2 CATHOLIC I N T E LLECTUALS AND T H E CHALLENGE O F D E M O C RACY
Ketteler had been the :first to articulate German Catholic op position to capitalism and what could be called classical political liberalism (that which embraced the principles oflaissez-faire, laissez aller, and utilitarian individualism) . Karl von Vogelsang, whose romantic and conservative ideas informed the so-called " Vienna School" of the Christian Social Movement, escalated this resistance to an exaggerated and uncompromising level. 37 Vogelsang was a per sonal friend of Ketteler's, having converted to Catholicism under his influence. But unlike Ketteler and Ozanam, Vogelsang believed it necessary to reject totally three historical products of modernity: democracy, capitalism, and socialism. Ketteler and Ozanam believed the excesses of capitalism resulted from economic and social devel opments that were a natural part of the historical process (the rise ofindustrial society) and thus were amenable to reform. Vogelsang, however, regarded modernization as an exclusively moral problem produced by the Protestant Reformation, an event which in his mind represented a perversion of Christianity. Consequently, capi talism and liberalism, integral components of that process of change, were beyond rehabilitation. Rather than reform such evils, Catholics must expurgate them from contemporary culture. For all these rea sons, Vogelsang has been recognized as the "father of Sozialrefarm. "38 Vogelsang descended from an aristocratic Prussian family, stud ied in German universities, and served for a time in the Prussian civil service. Eventually settling in Vienna, he became the most emi nent of all the German Catholic publicists. Vogelsang joined the editorial board of the conservative paper Das Vaterland and in 1879 founded his own monthly, Monatsschriftfaer christliche Sozialrefarm. These publications became his platforms for attacking Austrian liberalism and working out his own Sozialrefarm version of Chris tian action. In Vienna Vogelsang found a fertile environment for the germination of his ideas. He enjoyed support from Catholic romantics and conservatives who shared his idealization of the Mid dle Ages and his opposition tq liberal free enterprise and political democracy. The Christian Social Movement which Vogelsang came to dominate, labeled by its critics "the Feudal Austrian School," had its origins in court circles. Among his supporters was a group ofimpor-
European Catholics Confront Revolution 33
tant Viennese noblemen that included Prince Aloysius von Liech tenstein, Count Egbert Belcredi, and Prince Karl zu Lowenstein. The feudal values of Austria's aristocrats were especially threatened by the rapid social changes brought by industrialization. Indepen dently, the nineteenth-century economic expansion had led to the advancement of Austrian Jews, some of whom were well positioned in :finance and industry. By the early r86os prohibitions against Jew ish ownership of land were lifted throughout the Austro-Hungar ian Empire, and within a short while a number of wealthy Jews had been able to accumulate considerable holdings in Galacia, Bohemia, and Hungary. Not surprisingly, many Austrians came to associate the disruptions of capitalism with Jewish influence. Catholic aris tocrats, partly as a counteraction to capitalism's successful assault on the feudal order, reasserted their traditional leadership roles by taking on the defense oflabor. Their tirades against capitalist social and economic oppression, anticlericalism, and the corrosive mate rialistic values of liberal philosophy, a campaign which took on the tones of an aristocratic populism, became at times violently anti Semitic.39 In the harsh polemical style that was his journalistic trademark, Vogelsang asserted that the only antidote to the disease of modern life was the resurrection of a corporatist sociopolitical order. But unlike Ketteler's rights-centered state, his corporate state was to be solidified by an authoritarian social structure designed after me dieval precepts and under the political control of strong monarchy. As part of their refusal to integrate with modern political and eco nomic reality, the Austrian social Catholics who gathered around Vogelsang called for an exclusively Catholic labor movement (some thing Ketteler had rejected) and a clerical political party. Vogelsang's circle assumed the existence of a specific "Catholic" social, political, and economic order that had formed the "integral" core of West ern civilization and that stood in defiant opposition to the deviant institutional forms appearing since the dissolution of the Middle Ages. The rise of liberalism, capitalism, and the powers of finance had been responsible for the destruction of the guilds, eliminating the system of rules that protected those who produced from the rav ages of greed and, in the process, fundamentally transforming the
34 CATHOLIC I N T ELLECTUALS A N D T H E CHALLENGE O F D E M O C RACY
fabric of European culture: "Gin and the Jewish press," wrote Vogel sang, "that is to say, drunken stupor and obscenities, manage to kill the remaining memories of a Christian past in these unfortunate victims."40 For those who embraced romantic notions of an integral Catho licism that defined European culture, it became ideologically impos sible to make accommodations with nineteenth-century social and political life. Vogelsang, for his part, simply accused anyone who dis agreed with his views on the subject of being "liberal," meaning, in this case, un-Catholic.41 The narrow confessionalism of the "inte gralists" and their efforts to subordinate social life to clericalism estranged many Catholics from the vital realities of the day and failed to attract the working classes to Catholic sociopolitical positions. Vogelsang's reactionary, anti-liberal ideas had an enduring in fluence on later developments in Austrian Catholic social and politi cal thought. The demagogic, anti-Semitic politician Karl Lueger, whose movement gained control of both Vienna and the Austrian countryside, was tutored by Vogelsang. Lueger became a champion ofVogelsang's corporative social monarchy ideas. This approach gave wide scope to the power of the state. Vogelsang believed that the evil consequences of liberalism (the destruction of family life and the guilds, increasing crime, the exploitation of labor, and pandemic urban poverty) were so deep and pervasive that only strict state control over the social order could provide the needed remedies.42 Vogelsang's Sozialrefarm program was initially designed to appeal to the lower middle classes, artisans, and peasants, whose economic positions were seriously threatened by competing social groups that emerged from the growth of industrialism. The integralist Catholics of Sozialrefarm were persistent critics of more liberal-minded Catholics who followed the melioristic So zialpolitik approaches championed by Hitze. The latter collaborated with secular forces and were willing to make political compromises. Integralist criticisms, as a contemporary Catholic scholar has argued, revealed a fundamental misunderstanding of social deaconry, a prag matic tradition never intended to be more than a supplementary ser vice to ameliorate conditions in the material world. The integralist confusion of the social mission of the Church with the sacra-
European Catholics Confront Revolution 35
mental goals of the clergy, combined with their beliefin an exclusive Catholic political and economic order, resulted in a rigid "cleri calization" of social life and unrealistic theological theories under lying the practice of government and the organization of society. 43 The nineteenth-century alliance between Catholic social reform and reactionary politics flourished in France as well as in Austria. In the aftermath of the French Revolution, for instance, one of France's most distinguished Catholic historians, Joseph de Maistre, in his condemnation of Jacobinism, developed an influential counter revolutionary political philosophy that coupled monarchism with the teachings of the social gospel. Following the violence and anarchy of the Revolution of 1848, de Maistre's ideas gained a wide audience once again. The euphoria that had accompanied the publication of Lacordaire's and Ozanam's The New Era, which recognized the two basic principles upon which the Catholic social movement could be built-the need to improve the conditions of the laboring classes and the acceptance of political democracy as the instrument for doing so-quickly dissipated as the democratic energies behind the Revolution of 1848 turned to violence. When Louis Napoleon transformed the Second Republic into the Second Empire in 1852, he put into place a republican form of government that in practice functioned as a monarchy. Under Louis Napoleon, the Church, at least during the early years of his reign, was treated favorably by the government. Many liberal Catholics saw no political threat from imperial government and, in practice, no impending conflict between monarchy and democracy. Catholic democratic philosophies and movements seemed increasingly irrele vant, and by the mid-186os many of the leaders of these movements were dead. Furthermore, the political instability and working-class violence that followed the Revolution of 1848 discredited democratic political ideas and made many Frenchmen regard socialism as de structive and dangerous. Meanwhile, the French labor movement after 1848 became progressively more anticlerical, owing to the workers' bitter resentment of the Church's comfortable relationship with Louis Napoleon's absolutist regime. It was during the Second Empire that revolutionary Marxism began to make inroads into French working-class movements. Since the anti-religious Marx
3 6 CATHOLIC I N T ELLECTUALS A N D T H E CHALLENGE O F D E M O C RACY
was of Jewish background, as were many European intellectuals who identified with their brand of socialism, there emerged in the minds of many Frenchmen a close connection between Jews, com munism, and atheism. An economist who perhaps best expressed the sentiment of most Catholics on the social question during this post-Ozanam era was Frederic Le Play. Although he found much to his dislike in the social order of the Second Empire, Le Play did not believe that reform should come through social legislation or by working-class organization. In principle, he opposed governmental intervention, arguing that the state should retreat from social involvement and support the action of enlightened capitalists to improve conditions. Real social reform, said Le Play, must come from private quarters, starting with the family, and be carried into fruition by the volun tary action of employers and large landowners. The significance of Le Play's views is that they helped reverse the direction established by Ozanam's circle and served as a transi tion to an even more reactionary school of Catholic social thought in the latter part of the century. Le Play repudiated political democ racy as a means for social reform, emphasizing instead the volun tary, paternalistic efforts of the upper classes. He argued that moral reform was more significant than political or economic change, and he discussed ways that a modern monarchy could serve the needs of Catholicism. 44 The cause of democracy and socialism was further discredited among Catholics with the popular uprising that led to the creation of the Paris Commune in the spring of 1871, following the surren der of France in the Franco-Prussian War. The insurrection was eventually put down by government troops in May, but only after the Communards, some of whom appeared to be under the influ ence of radical socialist ideas, had massacred the archbishop of Paris and a number of priests and had wreaked considerable damage on Church property. The violent episode convinced many French Catholics of the importance of becoming actively involved in social reform, but it also made it appear that socialism was now the enemy not merely of property but also of religion. The excesses of the Paris Commune prepared the ground for an aggressive Catholic movement for social change under the direction
European Catholics Confront Revolution 37
of two aristocratic army officers, Count Albert de Mun and the Marquis Rene de La Tour du Pin. Albert de Mun had been initi ated into the world of Catholic action when, as a soldier, he became an active member of the Clermont-Ferrand Conference of the St. Vincent de Paul Society. He and Rene de La Tour du Pin had shared a prison cell after the two were captured by Germans in the 1870 Metz campaign. A turning point in de Mun's life was his assignment to Paris in the spring of 1871 to help suppress the Com munard uprising. He was appalled by the bloodshed but equally dis turbed by the bourgeoisie's indifference to the fate of the workers. Soon after the end of the uprising, de Mun and a few others, includ ing La Tour du Pin, formed a "Committee for the Foundation of Catholic Workingmen's Clubs."45 Their aim in encouraging French workers to join Christian associations was to bring them closer to Catholic teachings and thus "inoculate" them against subversive and dangerous sociopolitical doctrines. The Committee mounted a nationwide campaign to induce upper-class Catholics to take an active role in social reform by patronizing the workingmen's clubs. By 1875 de Mun's Association of Catholic Workingmen's Clubs could claim 150 branches with eighteen thousand members. It grew to some sixty thousand members by 1900. 46 De Mun's mission, how ever, was decidedly different from Ozanam's. He was roused to action not by the spirit of democracy but by the perceived danger of revolution, the same fear which shaped the ideas of de Maistre and Le Play. Appropriately, de Mun's cohorts, the founders of the Workingmen's Clubs, called themselves "Soldiers of the Counter Revolution."47 They identified the "Counter-Revolution'' with patri otism, France's military traditions, and aristocratic social leadership, and they viewed monarchy as the embodiment of French political culture. The political ideas of the Soldiers of the Counter-Revolution were fertilized by a close association with the Austrian integralist Catholics. In the 1870s Rene de La Tour du Pin had served as French military attache to Vienna, where he made the acquaintance of Catholics associated with the Vogelsang school. La Tour du Pin became particularly impressed with the group's advanced corporatist ideas, their "Christian economics" being far more sophisticated than anything he had found in France. A close link was established
3 8 CATHOLIC I N T ELLECTUALS AND T H E CHALLENGE O F D E M O C RACY
between the Vogelsang Catholics and the followers of de Mun and La Tour du Pin in France.48 The reemergence of republicanism in France after 1875, accompanied by a rapid rise in anticlericalism, brought conservative Catholics to the barricades. In the summer of 1876 de Mun was elected on a clerical and antirevolutionary platform to the Chamber of Deputies, where he launched bold attacks on republicanism. Within a few years he felt confident enough to cam paign actively for the restoration of monarchy, arguing that it alone could balance the excesses of liberty with firm paternal authority. De Mun and his allies criticized the Republican government's reluc tance to undertake social reform. The government had failed to pass legislation allowing working-class association and refused to initi ate state regulation of working hours on the grounds that it would upset the laws of the market and open the door to socialism. De Mun and the clerical-monarchists assailed the republicans as puppets of the selfish bourgeoisie who had forsaken the bonds that had tradi tionally tied leaders to the people. A major source of labor's insecurity, asserted de Mun and his Catholic colleagues, was the "law of 1 791," which allowed the Revo lution to abolish the guilds. The law had made all organizations of workers illegal, giving complete economic control to those who owned the means of production. Count de Mun, whose Working men's Clubs stood for the principle that all classes had the right of association, became the spokesman for the Legitimist pretender to the French throne, the Count de Chambord, who claimed that mon archy had always been the defender of labor's right to organize. The burden of acting as the pretender's interpreter required de Mun to develop and clarify his thinking more fully, and by 1882 he presented a plan for the application of guilds, modeled along medieval lines, to industrial production. His program called for self governing associations of workers and managers, syndicats mixtes, held together by the bonds of Christian confraternity (involving reciprocal duties) and the common interest of enterprise. The "great social necessity of our time," said de Mun, is that which existed in the old guild institutions: "personal contact, conciliation ofinterest, appeasement, which cannot be had except by the reconstruction of the industrial family."49 The guilds that de Mun envisioned would
European Catholics Confront Revolution 3 9
not only guarantee labor's basic rights (providing health insurance, regulating hours of work, maintaining living wages, and so on) but also give them a share in the management of industry, thus provid ing a greater sense of responsibility by restoring their interests and pride in the products of production. De Mun speculated that the guilds might someday become the vehicle for representing labor's political interests in government. De Mun's social Catholicism was inspired by his predecessor, Frederic Le Play. However, though he owed much to his master, it is obvious that de Mun developed a program more radical than Le Play's. Whereas the latter had eschewed statism in any form and advocated the voluntary creation of Christian guilds, de Mun's asso ciation eventually endorsed obligatory state action to create a guild social order. The founders of the Catholic Workingmen's Clubs were in close everyday contact with the problems oflabor, and since they were committed to action, it was only natural that they would sacrifice some of their idealism as they struggled to bring social and economic improvement for the working classes. La Tour du Pin had convinced the Association ofWorkingmen's Clubs to establish a special school to study social economics in 1872, and this "Council of Studies" worked out specific doctrines for establishing a new guild order along Christian lines. The council's ideas were published in it's review, L'Association catholique, and drew heavily from the Austrian integralist Catholics. The corporative sys tem that La Tour du Pin and the council advanced was not only eco nomic but religious, cultural, and political as well. In a series of reports that appeared between 1881 and 1883 , the council concluded that the influence of liberal political economics had become so inju rious to social relationships that the government had not merely a right but a duty to intervene. The council's report Avis No. V made specific recommendations for state action, suggesting a program of labor legislation which recalled that put forth by Ketteler a decade earlier in Germany. 50 Indeed, articles in L'Association catholique acknowledged Ketteler as the one who had blazed the path and pro vided the logic for their ambitious guild campaign. La Tour du Pin claimed that it was the German school which made them appreciate the intervention of state authority.
4 0 CATHOLIC I N T E LLECTUALS A N D T H E CHALLENGE OF D E M O C RACY
In the face of the challenges of the "Century of Revolution," a number of Catholic intellectuals managed to put forth needed socioeconomic programs suggesting that the Catholic Church was capable of dealing with modern social problems. In many respects, these nineteenth-century Catholic social analyses were economi cally and politically progressive. They articulated a critique ofindus trial capitalism and advocated reform programs as advanced as those urged by secular socialist movements in France and Germany. Yet Catholic critics of capitalism, notwithstanding La Tour du Pin's acknowledged debt to Ketteler, were divided in their analysis of the social problem and, more seriously, in fundamental disagreement about how to repair the social order. The melioristic, intellectually pragmatic group was willing to embrace the democratic values and political realities of the day; the "integralist" school was unalterably opposed to compromises with the bourgeois age and drafted plans for an alternative order that was politically and socially reactionary. These two approaches would divide Catholic intellectuals well into the first half of the twentieth century.
C HAPT E R 2
The Development of Catholic S ocial Action in Nineteenth- Century England
A
lthough liberal Catholicism's first defenders emerged in France and Germany, perhaps its most intellectually illus trious champion was an English convert, John Henry
Newman.1 Newman had been the heart and soul of the Oxford based Tractarian movement, which included the powerful minds and personalities of Richard Hurrell Froude, Edward Pusey, John Keble, and W. G. Ward. The name "Tractarians" derived from a series of pamphlets, Tracts far the Times, challenging the shallow, rationalistic, and latitudinarian tendencies of the Anglican clergy.
The pamphlets revealed a yearning for a higher religious experience that would bring holiness, a presence of the divine, into everyday life . The Tractarians aimed to rekindle the religious B ritain's secularized clergy. The last of the published by Newman in
esprit de corps of series , Tract No. 90,
1841, appealed for an undivided, pre
Reformation Church. It was promptly condemned by the heads of the Oxford colleges . Newman thereafter went into seclusion and in
1845 j oined the Roman Catholic Church. Most Tractarians declined to follow Newman's path to Rome,
but their mission to recharge the spirituality of the Church of England brought many of them close to the Vatican's theological positions. Their major criticism was that the Anglican Church had been taken over by liberalism, a result ofits capture by secular forces that sprang from the Reformation. However, what the Oxford
4 2 CATHOLIC I NTELLECTUALS AND T H E CHALLENGE O F D E M O C RACY
movement meant by liberalism was essentially distilled Jacobin secu larism. Liberalism represented, for them, "the tendencies of mod ern thought to destroy the basis of revealed religion, and ultimately all that can be called religion at all." For Newman, "the combating of liberalism" was his life work.2 Especially troubling to Newman was the steady intrusion of the state into religious affairs, which in Britain had virtually turned the Anglican Church into a department of the government. Newman's later writings show that he ultimately realized that any practical resolution of Church-state relations would require an accommo dation with the modern state, and he seems to have accepted "lib eral principles" along the lines of political pluralism as the best means to this end. 3 Newman, however, was primarily a thinker and a scholar. For him, like those Tractarians who remained in the Anglican fold, the Church's mission was the saving of souls. He was largely uncon cerned with social issues. The Oxford movement was quintessen tially academic, restricting its teaching to the educated classes. Moreover, its outlook was not progressive but rather, in reaction against the cold rationalism of the eighteenth and nineteenth cen turies, was backward-looking and romantically medieval. As Pusey said, it was "to the old times and the old paths" that the movement wished to lead Christians, back to an age of mystery and emotion. That time for the Tractarians was the Middle Ages. 4 It was not until the end of his life that Newman recognized a connection between faith and the social problems of the industrial age.5 The Anglican Church discovered its social deaconry chiefly through the prodding of Frederick Denison Maurice, who abhorred the Oxford movement. The Tractarians had made a serious error, wrote Maurice, "in opposing to the spirit of the present age the spirit of a former age, instead of the ever-living and active Spirit of God."6 Maurice had a seminal influence on the so-called second generation of the Oxford movement, the contributors to Lux Mundi, a book of essays published in 1889 by High Anglicans championing the appli cation of Christian teaching to social problems of the industrial age. The importance of Newman's conversion to Roman Catholi cism was not the impetus he gave to social deaconry but the fact that he inspired British Catholics, "a race that shunned the light," as he
The Development of Catholic Social Action in Nineteenth-Century England 43
put it, to assume a more active role for their religion in national life. 7 Whereas Newman diagnosed the spiritual ills of his age, it was a younger Oxford convert, Henry Edward Manning, a pragmatist with an activist bent, who showed British Catholics how their reli gion could be a tool for social change. In his later years as Cardinal Archbishop ofWestminster, Manning was the Church's best-known and most influential advocate of Catholic social action, serving, in the words of one of his biographers, as the "leading social guru to European Catholics."8 Manning had been attracted to the high-minded spiritual prin ciples of the Tractarians while the Anglican rector of Lavington. There he began an active correspondence with Newman. The two men became warm friends, though in later years differences con cerning papal authority and Catholic education as well as person ality issues led to antagonisms between them. As was the case with Ozanam, the young Manning had been profoundly disturbed by capitalism's exploitation of the laboring poor. At Lavington and as the archdeacon of Chichester, he had been surrounded by the poverty ofindustrial and agricultural work ers and frequently vented his anger on those complacent owners of capital who felt no responsibility to their laborers once wages were paid. "The dense masses of our manufacturing towns, the poor fami lies of our agricultural villages, are each of them related, by the bond oflabour and wages to some employer, and on him they have a claim for alms, both of body and soul."9 But unlike Le Play in France, Manning was not content with mere charity and goodwill from the wealthier classes as a remedy to the social problem. As early as 1831 he saw the need of a living wage for labor as the best means of ame liorating poverty, and as archdeacon he regularly chastised capital ists for their economic theories: "It is a high sin in the sight of Heaven for a man to wring his wealth out of thews and sinews of his fellows, and to think that when he has paid them their wages he has paid them all he owes."10 Manning's liberal political tendencies can also be traced back to his earlier years when, as a university student, he became involved with his friend William E. Gladstone as a debater at the Oxford Union. It seems that the future Archbishop of Westminster was a good deal more progressive than his friend. In reflecting back on
44 CATHOLIC I N T ELLECTUALS AND T H E CHALLENGE OF D E M O C RACY
those years, Manning said that Gladstone had begun as a "Church and-State Tory," whereas his own Tory sympathies were more short lived, the product of a callow admiration of George Canning, and that early on he developed into a "Mosaic Radical." By this Man ning meant a radical in the tradition of Moses, one who recognized the inseparability of morality and politics. This apparently was also what Manning meant when he told the young Hilaire Belloc, upon whose impressionable mind he had an indelible political influence, that "all human conflict is ultimately theological."11 Belloc claimed this remark remained for him the single most important political insight: "it came to possess for me a universal meaning so profound that it reached to the very roots of political action; so extended that it covered the whole."12 Debating at the Oxford Union was exhilarating, and after regu lar visits to the House of Commons, Manning seriously considered a career in politics as a match for his driving ambition to improve the world. He never lost his passion for politics, but the family's eco nomic situation suggested that Manning consider a profession more financially secure. In addition, it appears that Manning felt some thing vaguely troubling about his political ambitions, as if they sprang from a personal vanity which perhaps required mortification. Shortly after leaving Oxford, Manning made the acquaintance of his close friend's sister, Miss Favell Lee Bevan, whose family, like Manning's, had been steeped in the Anglican Evangelical tradition. The two studied Scripture together, had long spiritual discussions, and soon thereafter Manning announced his decision to prepare for the Anglican priesthood. As mentioned earlier, while serving at Lavington he fell under the influence of the Tractarians, and of Newman in particular, who asserted that Evangelical enthusiasm, especially in a day where individualism was running amok, was insufficient without the moorings of a fixed dogma. Following the lead of the Tractarians, Manning read the Church fathers and undertook a careful study of the apostolic succession; and, like Newman, he concluded that Christian tradition had to be the chief authority for faith. The issue soon brought him to com parisons between Anglicanism and Roman Catholicism as the au thentic repository of Christian teachings. Once Newman made his own decision on the issue, it was simply a matter of time, though
The Development of Catholic Social Action in Nineteenth-Century England 45
much personal anguish, before Manning would follow the logic of Tract 90 and also convert to the side of Rome. The conversion of a person of Manning's energies and singular devotion to social action had a far-reaching impact on English Catholicism. The Catholic community in Britain had long ceased to play a significant role in social and cultural life. Since the Eliza bethan Settlement, English Catholics had found that it was safer to withdraw from public notice and practice their religious beliefs behind closed doors. Leadership of the Roman Church fell to a number of old northern aristocratic families. These proud house holds, whose predecessors were martyrs for the cause, had kept the faith alive but had done so in isolation. They sent their sons to the continent for schooling, gave up any claim to national political lead ership or pretensions to great intellectual achievement, and, for the most part, were content to blend into the English rural landscape as contented country squires. Those few Catholics who became politi cally involved in the last quarter of the nineteenth century (Lord Ripon and the Duke of Norfolk, for example) had little success in furthering the interests of their co-religionists. In the words of Der mot Quinn, their endeavors only brought "misplaced hopes and dis appointed enthusiasms," for the political parties, both Whig and Tory, largely ignored the concerns of their constituencies.13 Not only had these Catholics turned away from English political life, they had also developed a Gallican suspicion of Rome. Centuries in the theo logical wilderness, following the brave battles against the anti-Papist Elizabeth I and her successors, had bred a fierce strain of religious independence. Further, in the absence of a diocesan system, the old Catholic squirarchies were able to dominate their clergy almost as if they were bishops themselves. Their numbers, however, remained small. In the eighteenth cen tury Catholics probably numbered no more than sixty thousand in England, roughly one percent of the population. This demographic pattern began to shift dramatically by the mid-nineteenth century, owing to the influx of some half million Irish, the vast majority of whom were Catholic. Irish immigrants in flight from grinding rural poverty settled in the industrial towns of northern England where jobs could be found in manufacturing. The "Old Catholics" did not welcome this addition to their numbers, since the Irish were
4 6 CATHOLIC I N T ELLECTUALS AND T H E CHALLENGE O F D E M O C RACY
working class, often economically destitute, and, in the eyes of the Catholic squirarchy, culturally impoverished. The Tractarian con vert Frederick Faber captured such sentiments when he complained that at the London Oratory the working poor produced "immov able belts of stink'' which chased away Catholics from the washing classes. These types were "so plentiful in bugs that they walk about our surplices and take possession of gentleman's hats."14 However, this rapid growth of Catholics meant that the Vatican would have to reestablish England as an ecclesiastical province of the Roman Church.15 This had long been the objective of certain Catholics at the Vatican, in particular, the titular bishop in England, Nicholas Wiseman, who himself was oflrish descent. The English Catholic hierarchy was restored in 1852 and Wiseman became the first Archbishop of Westminster and Metropolitan of the new Province. However good for the growth of Catholicism in England, these were inauspicious events for the Old Catholics, who now saw lay control of the English Catholic Church slipping into the hands of ultramontaine forces and, more particularly, ofwhat was consid ered a rough Irish connection. The resistance of the Old Catholics was fortified by the fear that Wiseman, an alien and aggressive "Irishman,'' would encourage a backlash of anti-Catholic sentiment and legislation. As it was, the announcement of Rome's establish ment of the hierarchy in England provoked outbursts of vitriolic criticism in the press and protests in the streets, where crowds burned effigies of Wiseman. The Old Catholics were also threatened by the large number of converts who followed Newman into the Church, many of whom were aggressive about their newly discovered faith and appeared to Old Catholics as intellectually arrogant. Wiseman went out of his way to accommodate the Tractarian converts, appreciating that their reli gious zeal could provide the impetus for a Catholic revival in England. His penchant for promoting them to high posts and offices created hostility among the Old Catholics, who felt that the newcomers were being given advantages at the expense of "cradle" Catholics. All this explains the resentment at Manning's early promotion within the English hierarchy. The former archdeacon's administra tive and political talents clearly qualified him for episcopal office,
The Development of Catholic Social Action in Nineteenth-Century England 47
and it would have been a profligate waste of talent for a man of Manning's abilities to waste away in the catacombs, as it were, in a life-style that appealed to far too many of the Old Catholics. Man ning, for his part, was highly critical of the squirearchy's aloofness from social issues and their insularity from both national political life and the spirit of Rome. All the great works of charity, social reform movements, and efforts to ameliorate labor abuses in England, noted Manning, were initiated outside the Catholic Church. He advised his new co-religionists to learn something from the Protes tants, in particular, from the deeds of General Booth and the Sal vation Army. After all, he pointed out, the Holy Scriptures had not been placed on the Index.16 Despite the Old Catholics disagreements with Manning's evan gelical style and ultramontaine views, they rallied to the papal colors and threw their support behind Manning when in 1865 Rome made him Wiseman's successor as Archbishop of Westminster (he was given the Cardinal's Hat in 1875). Meanwhile, Manning continued to prod the Catholic establishment to ally itself more closely with the masses. Catholic aloofness was not a deliberate attempt to avoid responsibility but rather a combination of ignorance and ingrained social prejudice, the spawn of benighted insularity, or, as Manning put it, a matter of being "unconscious that Lazarus lies at their gate full of sores."17 But now, said Manning, it was time for Catholics to partake "in the trade winds of the nineteenth century." Seize this world, he urged, "meet it intellect to intellect, culture to culture, sci ence to science." 18 As Metropolitan and Cardinal Archbishop of Westminster, Manning concentrated his considerable political skill and concern for the poor on a variety of fronts, almost as if he were trying to compensate for the retarded social action of his fellow Catholics. He used his friendship with the Radical social reformer, Sir Charles Dilke, for instance, to obtain government assistance to build better housing in severely overcrowded and unhealthy working-class ghettos.19 Manning's reputation as a social activist was such that in 1884 he was the first person invited to serve on the newly created Royal Commission on the Housing of the Working Classes. There he surprised his distinguished co-panelists with what Dilke called
4 8 CATHOLIC I N T ELLECTUALS AND T H E CHALLENGE O F D E M O C RACY
unrealistic and "revolutionary" suggestions for urban planning, one of which was to remove polluting factories from cities into the less populated countryside. Manning felt that the commission's final report was inadequate to the needs of the laboring classes. In any case, its recommendations were largely ignored. Although disap pointed with the government's failure to enact the recommenda tions of the Royal Commission on Housing, Manning immediately threw himself into the cause of improving local government, where he did find considerable success in 1888 with the establishment of the London County Council. Although Manning never despaired of democracy, his experi ences with the tawdry side of English politics produced a dim view of the party system and Parliament. His bias against these would color the attitudes of certain key figures among the next generation of English Catholic intellectuals, upon whom Manning had so telling an influence. A note written in his later years shows Man ning describing Whig and Tory as "two forms of class selfishness," well-to-do selfishness, the other aristocratic selfishness. He had contempt for their politics (defining his own as "social politics") and for what he called that "Talking Mill at Westminster."20 Early in his career Manning had come to despise the practical results of what he called the "heartless and headless" notions of laissez-faire liberalism. The first tenet of his own visceral political philosophy was that Christian statesmen had a responsibility to pro vide for the needs of the working population, the claims of the poor being far more important than profit generated by the maintenance of a self-serving open market. Like Ozanam and Ketteler, Man ning's adherence to democratic political principles, and his urging of the Church to embrace them, made him an unabashed advocate of the interventionist state for the rights of labor. When an econo mist writing in the Manchester Guardian eulogized the unrestricted free market as the best mechanism for maximizing employment and the production of surplus value, since the so-called "law of accu mulation" would surely create job opportunities, Manning asked the logical question of what would happen during those cycles of the market where there were no surpluses. "Theories of the gradual accumulation of surplus will not feed hungry men, women and chil dren; and hunger cannot be sent to Jupiter or Saturn."21
The Development of Catholic Social Action in Nineteenth-Century England 4 9
Manning publicly identified himself as a labor activist in De cember 1872 when, presiding over a meeting at Exeter Hall in the midst of widespread dissatisfaction among farm workers, he pro posed a motion of support for the newly formed Agricultural Union. This was the first time that a high-ranking Roman Catholic prelate in Britain had committed himself openly to the cause of labor, and his words brought cries of protest from many of his fellow Catho lic and Tory conservatives who labeled him an "agrarian agitator." Manning replied that he was proud to be associated with such worthy efforts. The experience prompted a letter to Manning's old friend, Prime Minister Gladstone. I remember your saying to me many years ago that the next conflict would be between the masters and the workmen. I had been so much out of England then that I did not know how far this reached. I found last week that even my Irish hodmen are organized. I have also lately had means of knowing what the agricultural unionists are. As yet they are not political. They do not coalesce with the London men, but the London men will soon make capital of them if others do not interpose. The con sequence of this would be disastrous. My belief is that some energetic and sympathetic act on the part of the Government would avert great dangers. Could not a Royal Commission be issued to take the evidence of men who are now appealing to public opinion for help? If they have a case, it could be dealt with. If they have none, it would be exposed.22 A short while later Manning again wrote Gladstone calling for more specific governmental action. The old Poor Law, he pointed out, had saved the working poor for over a century, but the 1832 Poor Law, inspired by the Manchester School, was not functioning as a safety net. The government had to do something about it and the continuing grinding down of the laboring classes: Why cannot you do these things for the labourer? Prohibit the labour of children under a certain age. Compel payments of wages in money. Regulate the number of dwellings according to the population of parishes. Establish tribunals of arbitration
5 0 CATHOLIC I NTELLECTUALS A N D T H E CHALLENGE O F D E M O C RACY
in counties for questions between labour and land. If our unions were like the guilds, which created the City of London, I should not fear them. But the sou/ is not there. 23 As part of his role as a clerical revolutionary (Bishop Ullathorne at the time claimed that Manning was "revolutionizing the coun try"),24 Manning waged relentless warfare from the pulpit and in newspapers against what he called "the Plutocracy," a money-hungry clique of power brokers who had shown no compassion or justice for labor. Other Catholic prelates generally remained silent or, on the rare occasions when they did speak out, talked about the "duties" of the working class. In contrast, Manning called attention to labor's rights as a natural and important component of capital: "I claim for Labour, and the skill which is always acquired by Labour," voiced Manning in a lecture at the Leeds Mechanics' Institute in 1874, "the rights of Capital. It is Capital in its truest sense."25 By arguing along such lines, Manning established the principle that property was in herent in labor itsel£ Labor, he said, was the most personal and fun damental form of capital that humans could possess. "The strength and skill that are in a man are as much his own as his life-blood; and that skill and strength which he has as his personal property no man can control. . . . He can buy with it, and he can sell it. He can set a price on it."26 In the same Leeds lecture Manning came out in full support of labor's efforts to organize trade unions, a natural right in accord with what he called "the higher jurisprudence." "What a man can do for himself," said Manning, "the State shall not do for him. And the converse if good. Therefore Self-help under limitation. Self-help is collective. Therefore Union."27 Since labor was, in Manning's words, "Live Capital" (as opposed to money, which he called "Dead Capi tal") and hence private property, the worker had a natural freedom to associate with his own kind and had the liberty to decide for whom he would work and at what rate of remuneration. This logi cally carried with it the right to determine what constituted sub sistence wages. The trade union movement, which Manning was one of the first high-ranking clergyman to support, was linked in his mind to the medieval guild tradition, in that it was an effort to create a society for common protection and mutual benefit.
The Development of Catholic Social Action in Nineteenth-Century England 5 1
Manning concluded his famous lecture at the Leeds Mechan ics Institute (which was published under the title The Rights and Dignity ofLabour, 1874) with an emotional appeal for a more equi table and just distribution of wealth. No Christian commonwealth could rest on the accumulation of wealth "like mountains" in the hands of classes or individuals if the moral and economic wounds of England's poor were to be healed. In the following years, as British agriculture and industry came under increasing competition from Germany and America, trig gering domestic unrest and labor agitation, Manning made numer ous public appeals in the pages of The Times urging the government to provide reliefwork and provisions for the future that would miti gate sufferings produced by the inevitable cycles of capitalism. "Necessity has no law," Manning insisted, "nor has present distress, except a claim for prompt relief."28 The revenues to support such measures, he argued, could come from temporary hearth taxes. Per haps his most far-reaching defense of the worker came in an arti cle in the American Quarterly Review (1887), in which he asserted that people had a natural right to subsistence that prevailed over the rights of property. A starving man committed no theft, said the Cardinal, if he took what he needed from his neighbor to sustain his own life. The Times deemed Manning's statement "a wild proposi tion," but he defended it by drawing on the teachings of Duns Scotus.29 Such outspoken ideas brought upon Manning the charge of being a socialist ("I would call it Christianity," said he) .30 The Car dinal neither rejected nor accepted the label, simply saying that it was a vague, politically charged word that no one really understood. In his opinion "Socialism" had the currency of a "party cry" that reactionaries used to discredit the ideas of those who advocated change.31 Although Cardinal Manning called upon Gladstone and other leading politicians of the day to initiate government intervention on behalf of the less fortunate, he never believed nor advocated state control of the market or the workplace. He rather envisioned a lim ited role for the state, like that of a physician who is called in only when the patient is ill and who removes himself when good health returns. The point to be emphasized was that the restoration of good
5 2 CATHOLIC I N T ELLECTUALS AND T H E CHALLENGE O F D E M O C RACY
social health required some careful doctoring. Anything more than a pragmatic, limited intervention could produce the opposite sick ness and then certain disaster, "an exaggeration of the worst danger in politics-namely, exaggerated centralization."32 Up to this juncture, Manning had established a notable profile as a high-ranking Churchman who spoke out for the interest of the laboring poor. Increasing labor unrest and economic uncertainty, however, contributed to the Cardinal's becoming much more than a mere spokesman for workers. The threat of a working-class upris ing against the capitalist system and the possibility of class war in England roused Manning to assume a national leadership role as mediator between the claims of the working class and the barons of industry. By the decade of the l88os, the boom and bust cycles of English capitalism had created chronic insecurity and hardship among the working classes. Their frustrations led to frequent outbreaks of vio lence, the most serious of which occurred on 13 November 1887, an episode known as "Bloody Sunday," when police attacked working class demonstrators in Trafalger Square. However, the horror of Bloody Sunday paled compared to the cataclysm threatened by the great London dock strike of 1889. Problems concerning pay scales, methods of labor remuneration, and irregularity of employment produced a wholesale work stoppage on the London docks and all along the Thames River when lightermen, :firemen, riggers, engi neers, and others joined striking dock laborers. The action was unusual in that it was one of the :first times in England that skilled laborers combined and cooperated with unskilled workers. As the unrest continued, the possibility of a general strike rose, a move that would have brought all Britain to a standstill. The threat of broader action was partly the result of the failure of England's leaders to take the situation seriously. Parliament had adjourned without even referring to the strike, and the Home Sec retary, the Lord Mayor of London, and the chief of the London police had blithely left London for their summer holiday. Although Cardinal Manning was now at the advanced age of eighty-two, he rose to the occasion by quickly moving into the leadership vacuum. Even before the strike, the Cardinal had developed regular contacts
The Development of Catholic Social Action in Nineteenth-Century England 53
with labor officials, in particular with Ben Tillett, the trade union leader who had been trying to organize unskilled workers in the London docks. Thus, he was well informed of the conditions on the waterfront and the men's grievances. Manning's personal intervention (he, of course, never took holi days) led to negotiations between the dock directors and represen tatives oflabor. The eventual settlement was largely the result of his skillful arbitration between the opposing sides. The :final stage of negotiations required the old Cardinal to plead and cajole for over four long hours with the most recalcitrant and angriest workers. When a compromise agreement was ultimately reached, Manning delivered the terms to the joint committee of dock directors, since they refused to deal with anyone else. It took three additional days of tough negotiations to convince the owners to accept a settlement. 33 The conclusion of the London dock strike brought Manning popular adulation and international fame. Workers were so appre ciative of the Cardinal's performance that in 1890 his portrait was carried beside that of Karl Marx in their May Day commemora tions, and for the rest of his days Manning was able to exercise con siderable influence on the labor movement. One important result of the strike was that it revealed the efficacy of arbitration as a mech anism for settling differences that was far less costly than strikes or lockouts . Soon after the strike, Conciliation Boards, with equal representation of labor and management and with a neutral chair man, were set up in London and other cities. Manning, who can be considered the father of the concept, was invited to participate in one of the :first such boards created by the London Chamber of Commerce. Although Manning tried to play the part of disinterested inter mediary in labor matters, his close contacts with influential trade union leaders, such as John Burns, Tom Mann, and Tillett, and Manning's own letters themselves suggest that his heart was with the workers. To Lord Buxton he confessed in December 1889: I have been turning over the strike matters, and the more I think the more I am on the side of Labour. Labour and skill are Capital as much as gold and silver. Labour and skill can produce
54 CATHOLIC I N T ELLECTUALS A N D T H E CHALLENGE OF D E M O C RACY
without gold and silver. Gold and silver are dependent in limine. The union of the two Capitals demands participation in the product. Wages are a minimized money representation of shares in product-that is, in profits. Silvertown gives 15 percent to its share holders and denies halfpence and farthings to its work ers. This is more or less the state of the labour market at large. No strike is worth making except for a twofold share in the profits of a twofold Capital. 34 Not only did the workers deserve a fairer share of the products of production, it was clear to Manning that the strike was a legiti mate means for getting them. ''A strike is like a war. If for just cause a strike is a right inevitable, it is a healthy constraint imposed upon the despotism of capital. It is the only power in the hands of the working men."35 Another significant result of Manning's intervention in the London dock strike was the advancement of social Catholicism. His example established in the eyes of the industrialized world that the Roman Catholic Church had an interest in resolving social problems in terms satisfactory to the working class. Manning had labored long in his clerical vineyard to establish this point. Moreover, Cardinal Manning's direct influence in such matters went well beyond Britain. Manning carried on a regular correspondence with Ketteler, with Cardinal Mermillod, Bishop of Geneva, and with Pope Leo XIII, which allowed Manning to play a seminal role in the drafting of Rerum Novarum. He had also developed a crucial relationship with Cardinal James Gibbons of Baltimore. Gibbons was an ardent dis ciple of Manning's, and through Gibbons Manning even made a significant contribution to the cause of nineteenth-century Ameri can Catholic social action. Cardinal Gibbons sought to duplicate Manning's mission in England, namely, to convince the wealthier Catholics to become more responsible in social and political matters and to link the American Church more closely to the workers and immigrant com munities. In seeking these goals, Gibbons threw his support to the trade union movement, including an American working-class orga nization known as the Order of the Knights of Labor.
The Development of Catholic Social Action in Nineteenth-Century England 55
Initially, the Knights of Labor had a small membership, and in order to preserve itself in an environment hostile to the idea of working-class association, it borrowed many of the practices of European secret societies (special handshakes, elaborate initiation ceremonies, vows of secrecy, and so forth) . All this had an unfortu nate parallel with continental Freemasonry. During the intellectual struggles that grew out of the Enlightenment, the Masons had sworn to overturn the influence of the Catholic Church. Rome, in a response of self-preservation, had banned Catholics from joining the Freemason societies in Europe. The Knights of Labor became a problem for Gibbons and other clerical supporters of trade unionism in America when its mem bership expanded greatly in the late 1870s, owing largely to the influx of immigrant Catholic workers into its ranks. Matters became par ticularly troublesome after a Catholic, Terence V. Powderly, became leader of the Order. Under Powderly, Catholics came to make up two-thirds of the membership of the Knights of Labor. A devout Catholic himself, Powderly worked hard to get the American hier archy's approval of the Order. He pointed out that their secrecy was ceremonial and no threat to government or religion, and he man aged to have much of the ritual abolished. Cardinal Gibbons gave active encouragement to Powderly's organization. The members of the Knights of Labor by this time were primarily unskilled workers, and they were flushed with the glow of victory after a successful strike against New York's streetcar lines. But the Archbishop of Qµebec, Elzear-Alexandre Taschereau, and the Jesuits and Redemptorists in America, raising the specters of "socialism" and Free Masonry, disapproved of the Knights and planned to petition Rome to condemn the Order. This would have been a disaster for Gibbon's efforts to attach Catholic workers closely to the Church, since it was estimated that at least five hun dred thousand American Roman Catholics were members of the Knights of Labor. Manning intervened to settle the matter by openly committing himself to Gibbons' position. The Order represented trade union ism, pure and simple, said Manning, and he reminded the Roman authorities that trade unions originated in the Collegia of Rome,
5 6 CATHOLIC I N T ELLECTUALS A N D T H E CHALLENGE OF D E M O C RACY
out of which they passed into Christian law: "In the Church of Santa Maria dell' Orto every chapel belongs to, and is maintained by, some college or universitas ofvarious trades."36 Given his stature as an expert on labor-Church relations, and his close ties to key influential ecclesiastics in Rome, Manning was able to arrange a favorable decision for Gibbons on the Knights of Labor as a legiti mate organization representing the interests of Catholic workers. The verdict was probably decisive in preventing massive aliena tion of American workers from the Catholic Church. Manning fol lowed up on these behind-the-scenes efforts by publishing a letter in the London Tablet fully supporting the Knights of Labor and pointing out their link with the English trade union movement as part of a common and justifiable democratic struggle for securing the rights of labor. The letter was translated and republished in Catholic papers throughout the European continent. Cardinal Gib bons remained forever grateful for Manning's decisive intervention. Years later he wrote: "I can never forget the anxiety and distress of mind of those days. If the Knights of Labour were not condemned by the Church, then the Church ran the risk of combining against herself every element of wealth and power. . . . But if the Church did not protect the working men she would have been false to her whole history."37 The final and most advanced articulation of Manning's social program was outlined in an important letter to Monsignor Dou treloux, Bishop of Liege, who invited the Cardinal to address a ses sion of the all-important International Social Work Congress at Liege in 1890. Although Manning was too old to make the j our ney, the reading of his letter created a great sensation among the bishops in attendance. His letter was described as "a trumpet call to change. It roused the majority to enthusiasm while it angered those who were more conservative than Catholic."38 In addition to advocating the principle that social justice demanded the intervention of the state (since the power of capital ism was so great that the competition with labor was unequal) , Manning in his address to the Liege Congress also criticized liberal political economy for its narrow focus on value and exchange in absence of human considerations. Labor, the source of all value, was
The Development of Catholic Social Action in Nineteenth-Century England 57
a "social function and not a commodity'' and therefore had to be fac tored into all economic calculation. This social dimension of labor meant that individual workers should be given adequate time to meet their own personal and domestic needs. Therefore, the length of the working day and rates of remuneration had to be reevaluated in light of such requirements: "To make labour and wage pass before the necessities of human and domestic life means the destruction of that order established by God and nature, and the ruin of human society in its original principle. "39 The economy of industrial soci ety must be held to a higher moral authority. Two important consequences followed from Manning's social theory of labor: limitations should be placed on the length of the work day; and, since labor was a social function, a worker's wages should be decided not on the basis of supply and demand but ac cording to the importance of the social function he served. The prac tical program that Manning suggested from these principles called for, among other things, an eight-hour day for heavy labor, a ten hour day for lighter work, limitation on hours of labor for women and children, rest on Sundays, "a just and suitable standard regu lating profits and salary," free contracts between capital and labor, and a fixed minimum wage. 40 These were bold proposals, and although they received a sym pathetic hearing from most of those at the Liege Congress, many conservative Catholics found Manning's platform radical to the extreme. A number who were disturbed at the "excesses" of the Liege Congress withdrew and established a rival congress recom mending more moderate reforms and a program that was not so perilously close to dreaded socialism. Cardinal Manning's career marked the culmination of a nine teenth-century tradition of social deaconry. As Thomas Boken kotter has observed, in his efforts to advance the cause of social justice Manning carried on the work of Ozanam and Ketteler. 41 This liberal Catholic response to the emergence of modern industrial society was not fully accepted by many Catholics, especially by those who preferred to continue the traditional alliance between throne and altar. However, the writings and works of these liberal Catho lics established a body of social and economic theory that was rooted
5 8 CATHOLIC I N T ELLECTUALS A N D T H E CHALLENGE O F D E M O C RACY
in Catholic tradition, yet fully in step with the cultural realities of the modern industrial age. It called for Catholics to reaffirm their commitment to the Gospels by what Ozanam had called "passing over to the barbarians." "God forbid,'' wrote Cardinal Manning, that "we should be looked upon as servants of plutocracy, instead of the guides and guardians of the poor."42 This would entail a will ingness to embrace democracy and support labor's struggles to create solidarity and economic power through trade unionism. The social activism of the liberal Catholics also required that the Church accept a working relationship with the modern state. There were many forces within the various national Catholic churches and in the highest quarters of the hierarchy in Rome itself that resisted these calls for accommodations with modernity. The potential for draft ing a coherent, systematic program of social action for all Catho lics to follow suddenly became possible with the ascension of Joachim Pecci, Archbishop of Perugia, as Pope Leo XIII.
C H A PT E R 3
Leo XIII and the Principles of Rerum Novarum
T
he pontificate of Pope Leo XIII (r878-r903) was a water shed in Catholic history, for it redefined the Church's rela tionship to the modern world, establishing intellectual, socioeconomic and political principles that Catholics could use as guides for meeting the challenges of an ever-changing industrial society. Leo XIII's encyclicals laid the foundations for the modern Euro pean political movement known as Christian Democracy. Its ideas were first articulated in the r9or encyclical Graves de Communi. Here Leo committed the Church to the religious, moral, and economic development of the working classes. This initial pledge to serve the common people opened the door for more dynamic action, espe cially by Catholic laymen who wished to address political, economic, and social problems in the light of Christian values. Many of these Catholics ultimately concluded that the promises of the social gospel could best be realized through political democracy, worker partici pation in the management of industry, and the liberation of indi vidual energies from the confines of a patriarchal society.1 Joachim Pecci, the future Pope Leo XIII, was the product of a rigorous Jesuit education and thus well prepared to engage the secu lar world on its own terms. Although his early duties brought him into archconservative circles at the Vatican, Pecci's appointment as papal nuncio to the Kingdom of Belgium at the impressionable age of thirty-three exposed him to the world of liberal politics and the social problems brought on by industrialization. Belgium served as a magnet for European capitalist investment and was one of the first countries on the continent to undergo heavy 59
60 CATHOLIC I N T ELLECTUALS AND T H E CHALLENGE O F D E M O C RACY
industrial development. The noisy steam engines of spinning mills and gigantic metallurgical factories belching noxious gases over once serene pasturelands shattered the rhythms of rural existence. Those who had supported themselves in handicraft endeavors or agricul tural labor were thrown out of work by the expansion of mechanized production and obliged to accept meager hourly wages that in many cases were inadequate for subsistence. Workers who found factory jobs were herded into cramped, squalid, and unhealthy slums where they labored gruesomely long hours in adjoining factories and died young. During Pecci's nunciatore (1843-45) it was estimated that fully half the population of Bruges was destitute; a third of Brus sels had to be supported by public welfare. These were circumstances shockingly different from the stable agricultural society that Pecci had known in Italy. The economic revolution that was uprooting Western Europe's social order, sinking many Catholics like stones into the ranks of a destitute, exploited proletariat, created breeding grounds for radical, anti-Christian movements that ranged from anarcho-syndicalism to Marxian socialism. In Brussels Pecci also encountered a new state that functioned far differently from the absolutist monarchical systems he knew in southern Europe. Belgium and neighboring England, France, and the German Rhineland had experimented with various forms of liberal democratic institutions that depended on popular partici pation in political and legislative decision-making. Pecci quickly realized that Catholicism in these democratic, industrialized states was evolving to meet changing circumstances in ways that made the religion different from that which prevailed in the more conserva tive Mediterranean parts of Europe. The Church in Western Europe faced new challenges but also was given new opportunities. To meet these effectively the Church needed imaginative leadership on the part of Rome, one that could forge a pact between religion and mod ern secular culture so as to offer Catholics greater opportunities to find alternatives to socialism and radical liberal political ideology. It was after his experiences in Belgium that Pecci began to study Catholic writings on the social and economic challenges of indus trial society, especially those of Bishop Ketteler, who had argued that Catholicism had a central role to play in transforming modern cul ture along humanitarian and Christian lines. The archbishop of
Leo XIII and the Principles of Rerum Novarum 6I
Mainz had also recognized that the Church must collaborate with the state to effect such changes. By the time Pecci became archbishop of Perugia (1846-1877), he was well-versed in Catholic social theory, and his diocesan efforts in the cause of social deaconry suggest that the liberal Catholic theorists had a significant influence on him. As archbishop, Pecci's major priority was the improvement of the intellectual and spiritual training of the clergy, but most of his time and thoughts were devoted to the pastoral care of Perugia's working population. Archbishop Pecci was part of a group of Catholic scholars and ecclesiastics, spearheaded by Italian Jesuits, who believed they had discovered the mechanics for creating a working compact between the Church and modern civilization in the works of the great thirteenth-century Dominican scholar, St. Thomas Aquinas. As archbishop of Perugia, Pecci promoted the restoration of Thomistic teachings (as he would for all Catholics when he became Pope Leo XIII) as the core program of study in seminary curricula and in all diocesan schools. Those Catholics who were behind the revival of Thomism were convinced that the Dominican scholar's analytical system and especially his brilliant synthesis of faith and reason as sources of knowledge were readily applicable to the problems of modern civilization. In the minds of Catholic scholars there were serious errors in modern secular philosophy and scientific thinking. Many believed that Thomas's system could be used to point out the moral flaws in contemporary thought, protect Christianity from the results of such error, and, at the same time, demonstrate that there was no inher ent conflict between Catholic teachings and modern science. Most importantly, St. Thomas had shown that fundamental principles of Christian morality were a prerequisite for the solidarity of any sociopolitical order. As such, these principles were exactly the for mulae for bringing coherence to the modern condition, where indi vidualism and the collectivist claims of radical socialist movements were running amok. Archb�shop Pecci, like Ozanam and Ketteler before him, labored to show that the Church was not intrinsically opposed to the his torical forces of modern times. In a famous Lenten pastoral letter of 1877, Pecci asserted that the nineteenth-century infatuation with the
62 CATHOLIC I N T ELLECTUALS AND T H E CHALLENGE OF D E M O C RACY
idea of progress, especially regarding economic and technological improvement, could be shared by Catholics: Society, then, being composed of men essentially capable of improvement, cannot stand still; it advances and perfects itsel£ One age inherits the inventions, discoveries and improvements achieved by the preceding one, and thus the sum of physical, moral and political blessings can increase marvelously.2 When Archbishop Pecci succeeded Pius IX as Pope Leo XIII on 20 February 1878, the Church throughout Europe was besieged by liberal extremism and a hostile nationalism. Catholicism in Ger many was under the pressure of Bismarck's Kulturkampf, and in France and Italy nationalism had combined with a ferocious anti clericalism in an all-out effort to eliminate Church influence in poli tics and culture. Leo's predecessor, Pius IX, had managed to heighten tensions by anathematizing the modern age. Leo XIII made rapid progress defusing these issues and securing a leadership role for the Church, because he combined firmness with temper ance and displayed a spirit of compromise for the sake of political dialogue. Within two months of his elevation to the papacy, Leo XIII began to issue a series of encyclicals on a broad front of modern problems. 3 In contrast to many of his predecessors, whose vision was constricted by the parochialism of Vatican politics, Leo XIII was especially well-informed about contemporary issues. He drew on the thoughts of a variety of advisers and Vatican economic and political specialists, studied carefully both Christian and non religious literature on social questions, and regularly read all the major newspapers of the day. Leo XIII's active interest in current events and his firm grasp of Church social and economic teachings prompted the plethora of encyclicals issued under his name. Taken as a whole, these remain the most complete Catholic statement on social, economic, and political issues ever delivered by a single Roman pontiff. Moreover, these encyclicals were largely the prod uct of Leo's own thoughts and language.4 The central purpose behind Leo XIII's major political encycli cals was to show that Christianity was not at odds with the core of
Leo XIII and the Principles of Rerum Novarum 63
modern civilization and thereby to revive the Church's position as the central moral force in society.5 These concerns underlined one of the most serious challenges to Leo's papacy: the need to arrange a modus vivendi between the Republic and Catholicism in France. The strength of the extremists-unyielding Catholic antidemocratic royalists on the one side, and Rousseauistic, Jacobin liberals on the other-exacerbated the conflict. By the 1880s the French Church's persistent association with aris tocratic and conservative interests had managed to alienate not only the urban working classes but even large numbers of the peasantry from Catholicism. Catholic intellectuals also were growing impa tient with the Church's reactionary political and social posturing. Beginning in 1879 the Republican government decided to break the Catholic-royalist alliance by attacking the Church's monopoly of education. Declaring his intention to "organize society without either God or King,"6 Jules Ferry, Minister of Public Instruction, sought to establish a completely secularized national public school system in France. In the positivist spirit of his friend Auguste Comte, Ferry viewed education as the key to social engineering. Thus the laicization of education was the central great reform, claimed Ferry, "which contains within itself all other reforms," a prerequisite for all who believed "in the natural rectitude of the human mind, in the definitive triumph of good over evil, in reason, in democracy."7 Leo XIII joined the French bishops in protest against such ex treme legislation (in France all education was under the control of the Church), but he discouraged Count Albert de Mun from estab lishing a confessional political party to battle liberalism along lines pioneered by the German Center Party. Instead, he hoped to break the Church's dangerous association with social and political reac tion by reconciling French Catholics to the Republic and convinc ing them to concentrate not on revolution but on reform from within the legitimate political structures. Known as the Ralliement, this program endeavored to bring together Catholics and moderate Republicans in a common cause; its goal was to reintegrate Catho lics into national political life in order to work for a Christian society. Many of Leo XIII's political encyclicals had the French situation as their background. In the long run, the Ralliement was successful in convincing the vast majority of Catholics to support the Republic.
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Most of the hierarchy and especially the younger clergy rallied to the pope's appeals; Catholic public opinion also seemed to become more sensitive to France's pressing social problems. However, the Catholic radicals on the fringe, extreme monarchists whose religious principles were frequently compromised for political agendas, con tinued to resist the Republic and in fact attacked the Ralliement as foolhardy. Their reactionary opposition later took on the unpleas ant odor of anti-Semitism, an unsavory accompaniment of the con troversy surrounding the Dreyfus case, and this continued to do much harm to the Church's efforts to reconcile itselfwith moderate Republicanism and win support from the working class. One of the most significant points that Leo XIII established in his political encyclicals was that democratic forms of government were perfectly compatible with Christian moral teaching. This had special relevance to the political struggle in France, since the royal ists had asserted that monarchical government naturally comple mented the hierarchical structure of the Church and Catholic theology in general and therefore should be the model for all civil order. Leo rejected this argument, pointing out that the state was the product of historical evolution, had taken on various forms because of differing cultural experiences, and hence could not be expected to conform to an absolute political paradigm. Regarding governments, there were a few basic criteria that should concern Catholics: Of the various forms of government, the Church does not reject any that are fitted to procure the welfare of the subjects; she wishes only-and this nature herself requires-that they should be constituted without involving wrong to anyone, and especially without violating the rights of the Church. 8 The encyclicals Diuturnum (r88r) and Immortale Dei (1885) rejected the notion that the papal monarchy could be the only suit able model for good political governance. Instead, a number of political forms were permissible for Catholics, provided they were capable of ensuring the welfare of the community. Leo XIII went even further, remarking that in some forms of polity it may even be
Leo XIII and the Principles of Rerum Novarum 65
obligatory for Christians to actively participate in their own gover nance: "Neither is it blameworthy in itself, in any manner, for the people to have a share, greater or less, in the government; for at certain times, and under certain laws, such participation may not only be of benefit to the citizens, but may even be of obligation."9 Although Leo did not claim that the democratic state was the only form or even the best for just governance, the fact that he only insisted that a government should conform to Christian moral teaching cre ated a framework for resolving the conflict between the Republic and Catholicism in France. The pope was more specific about what types of government conflicted with Christian morality, and it was in this context that he confronted the theoretical basis of the continental liberal state. Leo XIII's condemnation of "liberalism" would reverberate through Catholic intellectual circles and become a central feature of con servative Catholic political writing well into the twentieth century. But it must be emphasized that his commentaries concerned "con tinental" liberalism, that which had evolved out of the Jacobin tra dition of the French Revolution with Rousseau as its guide. Leo's political encyclicals failed to make a distinction between this form ofliberalism, which indeed had proven itself to be an enemy of the Church, and that which developed in England and migrated to America, the ''Anglo-Saxon'' or Lockean variety that accepted the existence of natural law and fundamental God-given human rights and denied absolute power to the state. 10 A crucial difference between these two kinds of liberalism was that the continental form, inspired by Rousseau's Social Contract, asserted that all rights derived from the state; thus there could be no rights outside the new revolutionary social compact. This fateful premise was adumbrated in the famous Declaration ofthe Rights of Man and of the Citizen (1789), a document far different from the American Declaration of lndependence that partly inspired it (the American document speaks of natural rights "above" the state). This premise allowed the Jacobins to affirm that nothing could restrict the so-called "general will." Two key articles from the French Declaration illustrate this lethal point. Article 3 posits that "The source of all sovereignty resides essentially in the nation: no group,
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no individual may exercise authority not emanating expressively therefrom." Article 6 further elaborates on this sovereignty: "Law is the expression of the general will; all citizens have the right to con cur, either personally, or by their representatives in its formation. It should be the s ame to all, whether it protects or punishes . . . . " 11 In practice these claims meant that the authority of the revolu tionary government, emanating from the "will of the nation," could not be limited in any fashion . Those who opposed such force were outside nature, that is, beyond the nation and hence bereft of any natural rights . The logical consequence of such thinking made it possible for Louis de Saint-Just and Robespierre, the grand Jacobin interpreters of the general will, to assert that the killing of Louis
XVI was no crime, for the King had set himself in opposition to the nation. As the historian Conor Cruise O'Brien has observed, Robes pierre could say that "Louis Capet (ci-devant Louis XVI) was hors nature, a monster; so that cutting off his head didn't even amount to manslaughter." 1 2 This Revolutionary redefinition of sovereignty, from that which reposed on the concrete person of the king whose governance was limited by God's laws, to the abstract, collective person of an indi visible general will which recognized no law higher than itself, was at the basis of Leo XIII's condemnation of continental liberalism. In effect, not only had Rousseauistic notions of national sovereignty replaced monarchs, but a democratic state legitimated by the gen eral will had also taken the place of God. The significance of this was noted by the German philosopher Hegel, who observed that the new state was "the walk of God on earth." 1 3 Rousseau's influence on the French
Declaration ofthe Rights of
Man and ofthe Citizen was largely the
result of the involvement of an uncritical admirer, Emmanuel-Joseph Sieyes, an influential cler
gyman and member of the National Assembly who published one of the early important documents that established the direction of the Revolution. Rousseau's murky notion of the "general will" first made its appearance in Sieyes' seminal pamphlet, "What is the Third Estate?", one of the earliest and most influential efforts to redefine the basis of modern sovereignty. Here we find the Revo lution's first attempt to identify the people-the nation-with what
Leo XIII and the Principles of Rerum Novarum 6 7
Rousseau meant by the general will: "The third estate therefore includes everything that belongs to the nation; and everything that is not the third estate cannot be regarded as being of the nation. What is the third estate: Everything."14 Sieyes introduced this con cept of power into the final drafting of the Declaration, after hav ing raised objections to what he called "conventional" American ideas that had inspired the writing of the French document up to that point: The American declaration, Sieyes claimed, had "clung to an old image of power and its limitations, an image unacceptable to a 'people resuming its full sovereignty. . . . There is only one power, only one authority."' 1 5 Under the hand of Sieyes, the final draft of the Declaration played down any limitations on civil authority and instead cele brated power for the state with a vengeance. It was the Rousseau istic version of sovereignty, accepted uncritically by many supporters of the nineteenth-century liberal state, that Leo XIII directly chal lenged in the encyclical Diuturnum Illud (1881) . This document established the general foundations upon which Leo could later erect an entire doctrine on government. The initial proposition of Leontine political reasoning was that all civil authority came from God, not from any arbitrary human contrivances concerning social contracts.16 This is supported by the premise that man is by nature a social animal and must live with and depend upon others to develop his personality and to survive. But the requisite social order itself cannot achieve solidarity without someone having the authority to rule. The ultimate sanction for such authority comes not from the people whom the ruler serves but from God. The counterclaim that the people were the ultimate source of sovereignty was, in Leo's mind, one of the great errors of the century, for it placed "authority on too weak and unstable a foun dation. For the popular passions, incited and goaded on by these opinions, will break out more insolently; and, with great harm to the common weal, descend headlong by an easy and smooth road to revolts and to open rebellion."17 This is not to suggest that the people cannot designate their ruler through whatever means proves effective, but only that the conferral of authority to rule comes from a higher source. In this sense the exercise of popular sovereignty
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means that the people determine the manner or mode of expressing rulership, but the authority for governance, that is to say, the right to exercise power, can be conferred only through God. Since society must be orderly for individuals to reach their potential and fulfill their purposes, it is necessary, argued Pope Leo XIII, for citizens to obey political authority whatever its mode of designation since it is of divine origin.18 A central purpose of Leo's political encyclicals was to ensure the stability of civil order, since social gains rarely compensated for the pain and turmoil of revolu tions. It was in the context of such considerations that Leo con fronted the errors of the social contract of Rousseau. In Catholic political thinking, the people or the "general will" could never be the source of power. Therefore the people do not have the authority to unmake rulers, for only God had such powers: "But no man has in himself or of himself the power of constrain ing the free will of others by fetters of authority of this kind. This power resides solely in God . . . . There is but one law giver and judge, who is able to destroy and deliver."19 Leo denied the legiti macy of a revolution against established rule. His justification for taking this line of argumentation came from the Pauline Epistles, for Christ and the apostles themselves were obliged to live under the authority of repugnant governors. However, since governors hold their right to rule from God, they have a duty to exercise power responsibly and according to the dictates of natural law. If they fail to do so, the people do not have an obligation to obey. Numerous martyrs throughout history have chosen the course of disobedience. But disobedience is not the same as the deployment of force to overturn government. Re pulsive regimes may be resisted, and Catholics have the right to seek the substitution of a corrupt governance for one that conforms to natural law. However, the pope refused to countenance the use of brute force, advising instead the Christian virtue of patience against political tyranny. Leo emphasized the efficacy of Christians pres suring their rulers to make timely reforms as the best remedy against revolution, but in no single passage of his voluminous writing on the subject of Church-state relations did he ever see revolution as an answer to political oppression. 20
Leo XIII and the Principles of Rerum Novarum 6 9
The political encyclicals clarified Catholic approaches to the modern state. Pope Leo XIII's most celebrated encyclical, Rerum Novarum (1891) , laid out the general framework for addressing the most serious social issues of the industrial age. In many respects, the social problems created by industrialism were a far greater threat to the Church than the political struggles with republicanism, for the potential for class warfare went well beyond the borders of France. By the last two decades of the nineteenth century much of Europe faced the specter of working-class insurrection. A rising tide of fury was becoming more focused through the aggressive ide ologies of Marxism and anarcho-syndicalism. Both advocated the violent destruction of capitalism and its cultural bulwark, organized Christianity. In order to fight these battles, Pope Leo XIII had already re vealed his willingness to draw on the rich tradition of Catholic social writing. Meanwhile, however, Catholic social reformers were fail ing to attract the working classes to their positions and, at the same time, found themselves isolated within the Catholic community. Regarded as a fringe element tainted by the odor of socialism, they had become a distinct but largely unin:fluential minority among mainstream Catholics . The reformers were in desperate need of help from any quarter. Thus, Pope Leo XIII's active interest and eventual support was of momentous importance; in the view of Rev. Joseph N. Moody, it was comparable to the "capture of the Papacy by the reforming elements in the eleventh century."21 On a number of occasions Pope Leo had made public state ments encouraging workers to form associations to improve their laboring and living conditions. He also had gone out of his way to welcome several workers' pilgrimages to the Vatican. These labor ers came to discuss their social and economic concerns with the pontiff. In addition, the pope had supported Gibbons' and Man ning's arguments in defense of the American Knights of Labor. By the early 1880s Leo XIII had apparently decided that the challenges of industrialism required a thorough and systematic analysis from the Catholic perspective. He urged the formation of a special study group to undertake the analysis. The resulting Roman Committee of Social Studies was headed by Bishop Mermillod of
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CATHOLIC I N T E LLECTUALS AND T H E CHALLENGE OF D E M O C RACY
Germany, but its membership was recruited primarily from the Roman aristocracy. Its purpose was to undertake a detailed exami nation of social problems, particularly as they concerned the lives of the laboring classes, with the intention of drafting a program for action that would satisfy Catholic moral principles. This Rome-centered organization soon spread its communica tion links throughout Europe, due to the urging of La Tour du Pin. His experience with the French Workingmen's Clubs had convinced him of the importance of establishing an umbrella organization to unite all European Catholics who were studying social problems. Born in 1884 in Bishop Mermillod's library in Freibourg, the so called Freibourg Union was composed primarily of socially-minded lay Catholic upper-class intellectuals whose purpose was to study the social and industrial issues from an international perspective and to present their :findings to the Vatican in the hope ofinspiring some official action. Mermillod was president of the Union. Major leadership roles were taken by Austria's Counts Blome and Kuefstein and by the Liechtenstein brothers (Alfred and Aloys) , as well as by La Tour du Pin and Albert de Mun of France. With the exception of Mer millod, most of its leading lights were ardent disciples of the feu dalist Karl von Vogelsang. Given the different economic and political situations within the various countries represented in the Freibourg Union, the organization was never able to speak with one voice regarding the ways in which the Church should address social prob lems. The democratic leanings of Manning and the followers of Ketteler, for example, did not mesh easily with the paternalism of the Vogelsang School. There also were serious differences regarding the role of the state in reforming the industrial order. Charles Perin and Frederic Le Play of France interpreted the contemporary social problems not as the product of institutional failings but rather as the outcome of endemic moral turpitude. In their eyes social evil was rooted in the hedonistic spirit of laissez faire capitalism. They were convinced that genuine social reform could come about only through the universal application of Chris tian charity. For them, the enactment of social legislation by an activist government in the absence of society-wide moral regeneration would be much like trying to construct a house from the roof down.
Leo XIII and the Principles of Rerum Novarum 71
Such a project defied the laws of logic and was doomed to failure. They and their followers dissented vigorously from the interven tionist policies of the Congress of Liege, under the direction of Bishop Doutreloux, which, following the advice of Cardinal Manning, had called for the state to take an active role in social and economic reform. To Perin and his followers, this was heading down the perilous path to socialism. They seceded from the Social Work Congress of Liege in 1890 and established their own anti-interventionist association. There were other disagreements among those who did not accept the need for action by the state. Those affili ated with the Frei Vereinigung (Free Association), a group of German and Austrian social reformers including Counts Blome and Kuefstein, were com mitted to the abolition of wages as well as the system of credit upon which capitalism operated. To these reformers capitalism itself was the source of all social evil. It was a system driven by the relentless quest for self-gratification. It was rooted in an ethic that allowed the exploitation oflabor through wages and usurious credit schemes (in the hands of the Jews), keeping the majority of men in thrall to the few. Therefore they recommended that the Church work toward the abolition of capitalism with its replacement by a corporative sys tem modeled along medieval lines. Another influential group of Catholic reformers urged a less radical and more realistic alternative. They believed that it was pos sible to reform the capitalist system from within. Archbishops Jacobini and Mermillod, both leaders in the Roman Committee of Social Studies formed by Leo XIII, asserted that labor itself was a key factor of production and could therefore demand a fair price in the marketplace. They recognized the worker as one of the three components required for industrial output (along with the entre preneur, or manager, and the capitalist) and argued that it was pos sible to create an environment in which all three "partners" could share equally in the profits of production. Not only could the cur rent economic system be made to work better, but, they pointed out, the capitalist system of credit served a crucial function. It lubricated the gears of the economy and assured the accumulation of the profits in which all three "partners" should share. Although the Catholic voices of reform took on a cacophonous tone, there was a certain continuity of purpose that tied together the
72 CATHOLIC I N T E LLECTUALS AND T H E CHALLENGE O F D E M O C RACY
work of the various study associations, the workers' pilgrimages to Rome, Gibbons' defense of the Knights of Labor, and especially Manning's program for settling the London docker's strike of 1889. What was needed was a synthesis of such thinking and a sharply focused program for Christian action on contemporary social prob lems that could bring together all varieties of concerned Catholics. This was the central challenge for Pope Leo XIII, and he aptly met it in the encyclical Rerum Novarum. All those Catholics who sought a public forum for their social and economic ideas were given a careful reading before Leo drafted his most important encyclical. Rerum Novarum proved to be a bril liant synthesis of Catholic social thought, incorporating the ideas of Ozanam, Ketteler, de Mun, Manning, and Gibbons, among others. Of course, almost all Catholic activists claimed that the encyclical was a vindication of their own particular platforms and concerns. However, Rerum Novarum did not endorse specific approaches to resolving social problems, since the historical process is dynamic and there are cultural differences from one country to another. Thus Rerum Novarum made no effort to define a single Christian culture or program, but instead laid out broad general principles upon which a consensus for reconstruction might take place. In the end this was the best approach: it avoided disappointing particularistic interests and prevented a liberal /working class backlash, since many of the special programs advocated by the Austrian-Vogelsang School were too amorphous, paternalistic, and economically regressive to win the support of either labor or moderate bourgeois opinion in the West ern parts of Europe. The significance of Rerum Novarum was that it constituted an official Catholic, Vatican-led alternative for social action at a time when the extremes of free-wheeling capitalism and Marxian socialism had arrogated to themselves the right to define the parameters of the industrial age. As such it offered a "third way," a path of compromise for dealing with the socioeconomic dilemmas of modernity. It avoided the radical alternatives of either an un controlled, predatory market system or authoritarian collectivism. Yet there was nothing fanciful or backward-looking about Rerum Novarum. In the spirit of social deaconry, the encyclical demanded that Catholics look at the world realistically.
Leo XIII and the Principles of Rerum Novarum 73
Like the influential Communist Man ifesto, against which Rerum Novarum was meant to be compared, Leo's social encyclical began by focusing on the traumatic impact ofindustrial production on the condition oflabor. The encyclical located the central problem in the class structure ofindustrial society, a dichotomy of owners and work ers spawned by the liberal creed of individual self-aggrandizement. What set this age apart from the past was the radical polarization of employers who monopolized the means of production and those who owned nothing but their capacity for labor. With the passing of the guilds, the working classes were deprived of any corporate body that could protect them from the rapacity of their masters: by degrees it has come to pass that working men have been sur rendered, isolated and helpless, to the hard-heartedness of employers and the greed of unchecked competition . . . . To this must be added that the hiring oflabor and the conduct of trade are concentrated in the hand of comparatively few; so that a small number of very rich men have been able to lay a yoke little better than that of slavery itself 22
Rerum Novarum's socioeconomic analysis may have dovetailed with Marx's critique of capitalism, but there were unbridgeable dif ferences in the ways in which they proposed to change the situation. Whereas Marx accepted class warfare as a key factor in an inevitable process of social liberation, Leo emphasized the necessity of miti gating the struggle for purposes of social harmony. Marx held that the social problem was produced by contradictions within the cul tural institutions of bourgeois society. These would produce inex orable conflicts that would ultimately destroy the social and political order. Leo, on the other hand, believed that the problem was caused by the misuse of institutions and was convinced that the system could be reformed through moral leadership and a general society wide commitment to change. Pope Leo XIII disagreed with both liberal and Marxist econo mists who deemed labor to be the source of all value. Echoing an argument raised previously by Jacobini and Mermillod of the Roman Committee of Social Studies, the pope asserted that an
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alliance between the worker and capital was required to produce wealth. The idea that working men were destined by law to live in mutual conflict with management was based on a false reading of history and was thoroughly irrational. Capital and labor were rather mutually dependent. "Each needs the other; capital cannot do with out labor, nor labor without capital. "23 Thus it would be unfair to destroy the power of the one simply because it abused the means of production. Leo rejected the notion of an inevitable dialectic of struggle (part of what Marx called the law of history) , which, taken to its logical conclusion, negated man's efforts to control his own destiny. He also pointed out the folly of trying to help the poor by trans ferring private property to the state. Instead of eliminating private ownership, Leo sought ways of preserving proprietorship in such a fashion that the privilege would be enjoyed by the greatest number of people. The pope's defense of property was drawn from the teach ings of St. Thomas: proprietorship had a central social and economic function, namely, to provide security and freedom for individuals in their communal groups. To give the state sole monopoly over its use not only invited serious abuse of power but would constitute a violation of natural law. As two prominent interpreters of the labor encyclicals have pointed out, property was so intrinsically bound up with the rhythms of human life "that to abolish it would be a vio lation of human rights. To destroy this institution would be to impair fundamentally man's capacity for right living. Therefore it would be an act of gross immorality."24 Central to Rerum Novarum was the assertion that labor itself constituted private property. The individual worker had the right to sell this property-in effect, his labor power (the ability to produce value)-to the capitalist for payment of wages. The worker was motivated to enter this marketplace out of a natural desire to sur vive but also to enlarge his personal property, which he could do through the careful disposition of his wages: it is precisely in such power of disposal that ownership obtains, whether the property consists of lands or chattels. Socialists, therefore, by endeavoring to transfer the possessions of indi-
Leo XIII and the Principles of Rerum Novarum 75
viduals to the community at large, strike at the interests of every wage-earner, since they would deprive him of the liberty of dis posing of his wages, and thereby all hope and possibility of increasing his resources and bettering his condition of life.25 Socialism, however, was by no means the sole concern of Rerum Novarum. In very precise language, Leo XIII castigated the abuse of private property by capitalists. As he was quick to point out, "To exercise pressure upon the indigent and destitute for the sake of gain, and to gather one's profit out of the need of another is con demned by all laws, human and divine."26 Furthermore, unbridled competition, fueled by economic liberalism's worship ofindividual ism, failed to recognize the importance of man's need for security (which disappeared in the free-for-all of a pure market economy) and ultimately led to one of the most dangerous political situations: too much power in the hands of a few. Despite the potential for evil that accompanied the abuse of private proprietorship, which loomed as a chronic dark shadow in the market economy, Leo at no time advocated its abolition. Instead, Rerum Novarum appealed for a redistribution of property so even more people would have the opportunity for personal growth and independence. Laws favoring the widest possible ownership could diffuse the traditional source of civil conflict (the class problem), since the gulfwould be narrowed between vast wealth and abject poverty. A more equitable distribu tion of property also might have the salutary economic effect of increasing productivity, since individuals labor more diligently on property that belongs to them personally. As a means to this end, Leo XIII advocated an interventionist state (this was emphasized throughout the encyclical, thereby serv ing as an imprimatur of the programs of Ozanam, Ketteler, Man ning, and others), though he advised that such power regarding property be used cautiously. The state's authority derived from nature, not man: "the State has the right to control its use in the interests of the public good alone, but by no means to absorb it alto gether."27 But it had no right to appropriate property to itself Although Rerum Novarum asserted the inviolability of private property, in adherence to the teachings of St. Thomas it emphasized
76 CATHOLIC I NTELLECTUALS A N D T H E CHALLENGE O F D E M O C RACY
that proprietorship was not an absolute right but one that required responsibility, a duty dictated by the "necessities of good living" for the community as a whole. The central issue was not ownership so much as proper use. In this respect property was a trust. Its owners were obliged to serve as stewards of the goods that God has pro vided for human betterment; they had a responsibility to serve the community. But nowhere in Rerum Novarum, or in any subsequent official writings, was it ever declared that such stewardship should be entrusted to the guardian of an elite. What then was Rerum Novarum's program for social reform? Although he appreciated the importance of the Church's traditional reliance on charity, Leo realized that the gravity of the social prob lems caused by industrialization was well beyond the sway of indi vidual actions and instead required a collective effort assisted by the state. However, all practical programs for reforming the social order had to be preceded by the recognition that what confronted mod ern society was a profound moral problem. At the core of Rerum Novarum was the recognition that the welfare of humanity must be the prime concern in all economic calculations. Man's inherent dig nity, born of God's creation, needed to be reflected in all facets of society, no less the economic sector. Thus the science of economics was obliged to serve man's moral needs, an ethical imperative largely missing in the modern age. Since the social problem was deemed to be the product of moral failure, not systemic institutional dysfunction-which Marxists believed required revolution-it became necessary to raise the spiri tual consciousness of the entire community to undertake reforms: "since religion alone . . . can destroy the evil at its root, all men should rest persuaded that the main thing needful is to re-establish Christian morals apart from which all the plans and devices of the wise will prove of little avail."28 This requisite society-wide moral commitment to action was a vast undertaking that must go beyond confessional lines . Therefore, Leo XIII appealed to all men and women ofgood will to participate in the effort: Rerum Novarum was addressed to the entire Western community, not just Catholics alone. In the Apostolic tradition Leo XIII called upon his Catholic clergy to take the first step in providing the necessary moral lead-
Leo XIII and the Principles of Rerum Novarum 77
ership that would inspire action: each must "put his hand to the work," as Leo put it, so as to raise the social consciousness of the community. Ultimately, of course, the moral crusade would need the cooperation and hard labor of everyone, not simply lay and clerical Catholics. Once the appropriate moral commitment had been established, Rerum Novarum spelled out what Catholic social doctrine required of the state. The encyclical broke cleanly with prevailing liberal laissez-faire policy by insisting that government had a responsibility not just to protect those of wealth, but to serve the common good. If this meant that certain elements of the community were suffer ing unfairly from the "cruelty of men of greed," the state must cor rect the situation through legislation in the interests of justice and for the prevention of social unrest. In addition, the state should pro tect private property, curb those who advocate public violence, and provide remedies to settle conflicts between labor and capital. Although Leo XIII stressed the social responsibilities of the state, he cautioned that its powers should not be so extensive that they absorb those parts that are anterior to civil society, namely, the individual and the family. Both have rights and duties of their own that have a higher sanction than the prerogatives of government. Pope Leo insisted that the power of the state be guided by the prin ciple of subsidiarity: government should provide auxiliary services to its citizens so as to supplement the efforts ofindividuals and their families. But direct state intervention into the lives of citizens should occur only when those basic agencies proved incapable of protect ing themselves: "If a family finds itself in exceeding distress, utterly deprived of the counsel of friends, and without any prospect of extri cating itself, it is right that extreme necessity be met by public aid, since each family is part of the commonwealth."29 The political powers of the modern state were so far-reaching that they had to be held to the strictest standards of control in order to prevent abuse. As a general guideline its powers should be used for "public well-being and private prosperity'' and to "benefit every class."30 The extent ofits domestic intrusions should be decided "by the nature of the occasion which calls for the law's interference the principle being this, that the law must not undertake more, nor
78 CATHOLIC I N T ELLECTUALS AND T H E CHALLENGE O F D E M O C RACY
go further, than is required for the remedy of the evil or the removal of the mischie£"31 In the final analysis, Rerum Novarum's notions of social legisla tion were rooted in its Christian appreciation of the sacredness of the individual person: the state had a duty to interfere in economic affairs when human rights were threatened. In combination with the state and Church, the third agency to which Rerum Novarum appealed in the effort to combat social problems was organized labor. Leo XIII's encyclical made the revo lutionary declaration that workers had both the right and the re sponsibility to organize into cooperative associations-trade unions or guilds-to satisfy their basic human needs of protection and self-governance and, very importantly, to strengthen their hand in bargaining with management. Only by coordinating their desires through large-scale combinations could workers marshal sufficient strength against the weapons of capital. In order to augment this arsenal of defense, Rerum Novarum upheld the legitimacy of strike action when all reasonable negotiation failed. It was clear to Leo XIII that the worker had no power acting as an individual agent in a social environment controlled by the overwhelming forces of wealthy capitalists. A laborer's only recourse was to combine with his fellows in order to garner strength through numbers. A playing field governed by the rules of economic liberalism (which asserted that combinations of workers constituted a restraint of free trade) was grossly unfair to workers. The right to organize and to use the weapon of the strike would balance the contest by giving workers a more equitable chance to share in the fruits of production. Rerum Novarum also supported the principle of association because it was a practical way to mitigate the mentality of class war. In order to form such unions individuals had to overcome their own differences and learn the art of cooperation. Once they were able to merge their interest and strengths into the ensemble of a larger federation, they would possess the collective power to defend their interests and also to demand further institutional reform. The concept of federation was such an imperative of social change that Leo XIII and his successors urged other groups besides labor to organize as well. Professional people, civil servants, employ-
Leo XIII and the Principles of Rerum Novarum 79
ers, farmers, indeed all those involved in producing goods and ser vices could improve their position and facilitate the process of trans forming society by joining together in their respective social units. In effect, Leo XIII was recommending the resurrection of a plural istic corporative social and economic order. The medieval corpora tions had been destroyed by the onslaught of the Enlightenment and French and industrial revolutions. The result was the atomiza tion of humanity: individuals, bereft of their traditional associative bodies, were at the prey of wealthy capitalists and the omnipotent state. A restoration of a corporative society would counter this prob lem by allowing individuals to maximize their economic strength through becoming members of a group. Standing alone, man was too weak to contend against the larger economic and political forces that engulfed him: "It is better that two should be together than one; for they have the advantage of their society. If one fall he shall be supported by the other. Woe to him that is alone, for when he fall eth he hath none to lift him up."32 The natural impulse to gravitate toward private associations for self-protection bound individuals to the civil order. These smaller, "private" societies within the larger body politic had a natural right to existence as part of the "public" commonwealth; the state, Leo insisted, instead of legally prohibiting such associations (as was the case in countries under the sway of economic liberalism), was obliged to both guarantee access to these associations and protect their cor porate integrity. Yet governments must be temperate in the exer cise of such power: "The State should watch over these societies of citizens banded together in accordance with their rights, but it should not thrust itself into their peculiar concerns and their orga nizations, for things move and live by the spirit inspiring them, and may be killed by the rough grasp of a hand from without."33 Although Rerum Novarum avoided recommending specific po litical and economic programs, it was very precise about the funda mental rights of the working classes. In addition to the prerogatives of organizing into unions or guilds, these included the rights of access to accident and health insurance, a benevolent working environment, restrictions on the hours and conditions of employ ment, the observance of holidays, and, not the least, labor's right to
80 CATHOLIC I N T ELLECTUALS AND T H E CHALLENGE O F D E M O C RACY
a minimum wage. Rerum Novarum emphasized that "wages ought not be insufficient to support a frugal and well-behaved wage earner."34 This was crucial ifworkers were to be able to provide them selves and their families with the basic necessities of life. The just wage, however, was not a final goal, but only a minimum required for the laborer to embark on the more important objectives of own ing his own property and gaining an equal share with management in the ownership and administration of the means of production. Although Rerum Novarum made numerous references to me dieval values, the document never called for a restoration of the cor porate order of the Middle Ages. This was made clear on the issue of unions or guilds, in which the pope purposely avoided any men tion of the form they should take: "We do not judge it possible to enter into minute particulars touching the subject of organization; this must depend on national character, on practice and experience, on the nature and aim of the work to be done, on the scope of the various trades and employments, and on other circumstances of fact and time-all of which must be carefully considered."35 It would seem obvious that Leo believed modern circumstances precluded a return to the guild order of medieval times. This may have proved disappointing to some conservative Catholic social thinkers affili ated with the Union ofFreibourg, most of whom were monarchists favoring what were called "mixed corporations" con sisting of employers and workingmen. The encyclical's more com prehensive approach, calling for associations "consisting either of workmen alone, or of workmen and employers together" acting independently of the state, showed that the pope was prepared to entertain modern programs for reconstruction. This prevented con servatives and doctrinaire social Catholics from combining their preferences for "reform from above" with medieval concepts of cor poration and monarchy. 36 The broader suggestion for handling the social threat gave Rerum Novarum a strong appeal to modern work ers. Permitting workers to form unions or guilds on their own, with out the presence of employers or the involvement of the state-a position favored by Manning and Gibbons-was welcomed by labor in France and Italy, where there had been great suspicion of man agement's paternalistic intentions.37
Leo XIII and the Principles of Rerum Novarum 81
It is unclear how much influence Manning and Gibbon had on the encyclical's comments on the rights of workers to form their own unions. However, there can be little doubt that Manning's ideas con cerning strike settlements played a seminal role in the position taken by the pope on the issue of labor-management relations: in situ ations where both owners and workers believed their rights injured, "nothing would be more desirable than that a committee should be appointed, composed of reliable and capable members of the asso ciation, whose duty would be, conformably with the rules of the association, to settle the dispute."38 This was precisely the concept of arbitration boards that Cardinal Manning had proposed for set tling future industrial disputes in England. In the case of Rerum Novarum, Pope Leo XIII recognized the efficacy of its application to all of industrial society.
C H A P T ER 4
The Appearance of the "Chesterbelloc"
S
ince England was thoroughly saturated with Protestantism in both religion and culture, most Catholics considered it futile to try and influence public policy along Catholic lines. In the words of Christopher Hollis, nineteenth-century English Catholics "still had among them the memory of the catacombs" 1 and preferred to avoid attracting attention to themselves. Old fears and prepossessions die hard. Leslie Toke, one of the first laymen to advocate English Catholic social action, noted that the fact of hav ing been cut off from active political participation for three centuries had effectively undermined the English Catholic community's habit of citizenship. Only slowly would this group shed its timidity and apathy. 2 English Catholics tended to support the conventional pro grams of the two political parties, over which they had little interest in providing either influence or leadership. In general, it can be said that English Catholics were essentially conservative, suspicious of trade unionism, leery of anything suggesting socialism, and critical of their co-religionists who were politically active. These tendencies were mirrored in the Church's highest lead ership. Herbert Vaughan was a man of far different timber from Cardinal Manning, whom he succeeded in 1892, and under his tute lage the Roman Catholic Church in England assumed a conserva tive political profile in stark contrast to what it had been under the "People's Cardinal." Although Manning had been Vaughan's friend and patron, as well as his own choice as heir apparent to the See ofWestminster, the two men were of contrasting temperament. Vaughan came from one of England's oldest Catholic families, with 82
The Appearance of the "Chesterbelloc" 83
a pedigree going back so far in time that it lost itself "in the twilight of fable,"3 and thus was sufficiently steeped in the isolated gentry traditions that had so annoyed Manning. This heritage, along with his education in continental Catholic colleges, had bequeathed a distinct Tory paternalism that would always shadow Vaughan's social and political sentiments. Unlike his predecessor, Cardinal Vaughan was uncomfortable with England's fastest growing Catholic com munity, the immigrant, primarily working-class, Irish. England's Irish Catholics were grateful for Manning's tireless efforts on their behalf, which reached a climax when he boldly came to their defense during the London dock strike of 1889. Manning spoke with truth when he stated in 1887 that he spent his life "working for the Irish occupation of England."4 As Bishop of Salford, Vaughan had been both moved and shocked by what he saw of working-class life in the grimy industrial cities of the North; these experiences galvanized his commitment to pastoral and charitable missions among the poor, the "Crusades of Rescue," as he called them. Yet his socialization into a gentry world made it difficult for Vaughan to empathize with working-class cul ture. The Cardinal pitied the destitution of the workers and was sad dened by the grisly procession of hearses through their ghettos, but he never fully understood their behavior and values . His candid views of them betrayed the enormous gap in England between aris tocratic culture and the working class. To Vaughan the laboring men appeared to be "broad-backed powerful animals." With "words of the coarsest, foulest, and most degrading meaning," the workers "are flesh and blood, and they think and speak of nothing else."5 A dele gate from the National Committee of Organised Labour, who met with Vaughan to discuss his support for the group's pension scheme, related how the Cardinal was gracious, refined, and regal yet some how out of touch with the world of workingmen: "He wanted to be sympathetic, but did not quite know how, and moved uneasily in dealing with our subject, as one who travels on unfamiliar ground."6 Cardinal Manning, whose expansive social activism left even radical politicians with their mouths agape, occasionally chided Vaughan for having the rigidity and aloofness of an aristocratic stuffed shirt: you are already a good Catholic, Manning once told
8 4 CATHOLIC I N T ELLECTUALS AND T H E CHALLENGE O F D E M O C RACY
him, and need only sit at the feet of General Booth to be a good Christian!7 Although Vaughan admitted a moral and intellectual debt to Manning (Manning was responsible for "the formation of my character"),8 he had been slightly scandalized by his mentor's praise of the Salvation Army. He openly criticized what he consid ered Manning's overzealous public political activity, in particular, his role in the great London dock strike, and frankly disapproved of many of Manning's radical social policies. These Vaughan ascribed to "senile decay."9 Reflecting the assumptions of the "old Catholic" traditions, Cardinal Vaughan preferred to address social problems through Catholic institutions under the direction ofthe official hier archy, rather than to work for change through public organizations in cooperation with any who shared his objectives (even Protes tants!), a modus operandi with which Manning had been perfectly comfortable. One of Manning's driving objectives as archbishop of West minster was to persuade Catholics to "come out from their tradi tional obscurity and take full part in the national life of the country,"10 and this naturally meant developing a strong political position regarding social questions. For this reason Manning had urged Vaughan to cultivate wider interests and j oin causes that had no direct concern with sacramental work.11 But Manning would have been disappointed by his successor's approach to social questions, which followed more conventional lines. Vaughan concluded that the application of the general principles for bringing social reform, that is, laboring in the trenches of the slums and pushing for change in the economic and political sphere, was better left to "experts" and "to the controlling influences of a more enlightened public opinion."12 All this would take much time, but, unlike his predecessor, Cardi nal Vaughan was in no hurry to force the pace. Although Cardinal Vaughan discouraged Catholic political activism, he himself kept very busy making certain that what Catho lics read about politics and their religion was responsibly conserva tive. To this end he purchased The Tablet and used its pages to wage battle against what he regarded as one of the scourges of the age: we are "opposed by every instinct and principle to the spurious Liber alism and irreligious revolution of the Continent, we shall denounce
The Appearance of the "Chesterbelloc" 8 5
it in all its forms-especially when it manifests its influence among ourselves."13 In striking contrast to Manning, Vaughan with his strong conservative inclinations and close connections to the English gentry, was also unsympathetic to Home Rule for Ireland. The Tablet 's anti-Irish and Unionist bias made Vaughan highly unpopu lar among Irish working-class Catholics in England. A vigorous effort to organize Catholics to take more responsi bility for social reform did not occur until after the passing of Vaughan, and the inspiration for doing so came from laymen rather than high-ranking ecclesiastics. The progress was slow and con fused. In 1893, for instance, a mildly reformist body called the Catho lic Social Union was created, but it soon collapsed. The demise of this organization was due in no small part, claimed one disgrun tled activist, to the fact that "its name was supposed in some occult manner to connect it with 'that dreadful Socialism."' 14 This par ticular critic, Leslie Toke, published a somewhat angry essay in the Downside Review in 1907 which condemned both the apathy of well-educated and wealthy Catholics with respect to social problems and their antipathy to anything suggesting socialism. Widespread Catholic ignorance of papal social teachings could be seen, Toke noted, in the conspicuous absence of Catholic names on the mem bership roles of many reform societies in Britain. Toke wrote that the great majority of Catholics were "as completely unable to real ize the fundamental change that has taken place in political, social and economic questions as were the French noblesse on the eve of the Revolution."15 In fact, a good many Catholics had so little under standing of socialism that they made no distinction between the revolutionary writings of Karl Marx and the moderate musings of the Fabian Society. As a corrective to their ignorance, Toke recom mended a scheme for spreading papal social teachings through spe cial study groups and the publication of educational pamphlets. Another voice for action along these lines came from Vir ginia M. Crawford, a close associate of Cardinal Manning's. Con tributing money to charities might make wealthy Catholics feel good, but this was not enough, declared Crawford. She urged English Catholics to take their French counterparts (both she and Toke admired Le Sil/on, a radical social democratic paper advocating
86 CATHOLIC I N T ELLECTUALS A N D THE CHALLENGE OF D E M O C RACY
dialogue with Marxists and Catholic solidarity with the working class) as well as the new English converts to the faith as models for more aggressive social action. Toke, Crawford, and a few others who spoke out on such issues prepared the ground for the creation of the Catholic Social Guild (CSG) in 1909. Taking Rerum Novarum as its charter, the Guild served to coordinate various individual efforts at social reform along Catholic lines. It established study clubs, spon sored lectures, and published books and pamphlets to diffuse Catho lic social principles throughout Britain. One of the Guild's most important contributions was to publish an English translation of Rerum Novarum, thereby making it possible to introduce Leo XIII's social teachings to a working class audience. From its beginnings and well into the next few decades of the twentieth century, the leaders of the Catholic Social Guild main tained a working relationship with other reform groups, in particu lar, with the Fabian Society, which had a considerable influence on the Guild's development. Virginia Crawford and Beatrice Webb, for instance, had been close friends since childhood and maintained a regular correspondence throughout their adult lives. The Guild's first president, Monsignor Henry Parkinson, greatly admired the work of the Fabians and recommended that his students at Oscott College join the society. The Guildsman most thoroughly imbued with Fabianism was Leslie Toke, who had become a member of the society as a student at Oxford in the r89os. Toke urged Catholics inclined to social action to make contact with the Fabian Society and its academic progeny, the London School of Economics. 16 Taking its cue from the Fabian Society, the Catholic Social Guild viewed its chief function as pedagogical; it hoped "to permeate" the con sciousness of the working classes through Catholic social teachings. From the outset the CSG made it clear that it would assume a moderate course of action and make special efforts to avoid con troversial political issues. According to its organizational statutes as revised in r9r2, the Guild was not allowed to take part in party poli tics. The CSG's reading packages, the so-called "book boxes," con tained an assortment of standard publications on sociology, trade unionism, wage questions, and the like, but works of"a purely politi cal nature and those representing extreme viewpoints on the social
The Appearance of the "Chesterbelloc" 8 7
questions are generally avoided." 1 7 This policy was extended to other organizations that grew out of the CSG as well. The Catholic Evi dence Guild, for example, which was founded to teach the faith to non-Catholics, was forbidden to incorporate politics into its plat form: "The rule is extended in practice to the avoidance of contro versial questions of a social and economic nature, which though not strictly political yet might easily distract the meeting from its true aim, which is religious." 18 Manning would have been pleased with the Catholic Social Guild's efforts to move beyond confessional lines by cooperating with non-Catholics and with its willingness to work among the laboring poor in the cause of social deaconry. Yet the Catholic Social Guild probably would not have measured up fully to Manning's standards, for he himself was committed to political action in order to force the state to use its powers oflegislation as a vehicle for social change. The Guild took little interest in politics and, though it made general references to Rerum Novarum, failed either to support particular pieces oflegislation to ameliorate social problems or to articulate a distinctly Catholic alternative to the pre vailing capitalist mentality of the governing elites. The Roman Catholic hierarchy in England also remained silent on issues that might have shaken the established order. Cardinal Manning's liberal political enthusiasms and his espousal of state-sponsored programs for social reform were not matched in Catholic circles after the turn of the century. In many respects, how ever, his ideals were carried on by several Anglican social activists and, most importantly for the purposes of this study, by two writ ers who were soon to become some of Britain's leading men of let ters: Hilaire Belloc and Gilbert Keith Chesterton. The powerful personalities and ideas of these two, whom George Bernard Shaw labeled the "Chesterbelloc," sparked a worldwide sociopolitical movement called Distributism. This movement, along with the two men's voluminous writings, became one of the most important in fluences on Roman Catholic opinion in the English-speaking world well into the first half of the twentieth century. 19 In 1969, for example, Adrian Cunningham remarked that in Distributism one finds "the maximum possible consciousness of the social Catholicism that immediately precedes our own time."20 Although the Distributists
88 CATHOLIC I N T ELLECTUALS AND T H E CHALLENGE OF D E M O C RACY
were few in number, they had an enduring impact on the Catholic intellectual establishment. In the words of Cunningham: That influence is not just something 'there' which affects us, as it were externally; it was, and in some ways still is, an 'internal' phenomenon, part of the cultural apparatus through which British Catholics have established their idea of themselves and their role in society, it is part of our perception and self consciousness. 21 The irony of the Distributist movement is that its breeding ground was the turf of Anglicans and socialists rather than that of Roman Catholics. Most of the creative forces behind Distribu tism-Cecil and Gilbert Chesterton, A. J. Penty, Maurice Reckitt, Eric Gill, and others-had entered the political arena from the tra ditions of Christian and Guild Socialism. The early careers of these writers had been influenced by Christian Socialists, a group of activists from across denominations who, inspired by the work of F. D. Maurice, sought to apply the Gospels to Britain's social prob lems. Maurice had been a critic of the Victorian churches' narrow insistence on confining religion to personal morality and salvation. The "Kingdom of God," said Maurice, includes the whole of His creation, embracing man in all his parts, secular and religious. Like the continental Catholics who accepted the calling of social dea conry, Maurice, in the words of Bishop E. R. Wickham, had "earthed" the Gospel. 22 The economic ideas of the early English Christian Socialists (notably J. M. Ludlow, the founder of the movement, and the nov elist Charles Kingsley) derived from French Catholic socialists, some of whom were associated with Frederic Ozanam. Ludlow had studied the teachings of the Catholic convert and socialist P.-J.-B. Buchez in Paris. Like Ozanam, Buchez had worked for a recon ciliation between Catholicism and popular democracy. Buchez believed that a major mechanism for essentially "Christianizing" the forces unleashed by the French Revolution would be a clergy pre pared in the traditions of social deaconry.23 Buchez also was one of the first in France to recommend the creation of workers' coopera-
The Appearance of the "Chesterbelloc" 8 9
tive associations that ultimately might take over ownership of the means of production. This would create the conditions for social ism, which Buchez regarded as the ideal, divinely-intended model for society. Charles Kingsley, on the other hand, fell under the sway of the liberal Catholic Felicite Lamennais, who labored to break the alliance between the French Catholic Church and monarchism. Lamennais' newspaper, L'avenir, championed a decentralized social and politi cal order held together by workers' cooperatives under the leader ship of the Catholic Church. Buchez, Lamennais, and other French Catholic socialists preached that capitalism was parasitic and destructive of God's worldly design. However, they believed that human progress could be assured through proper social reform, since a benevolent God (in contrast to the vengeful, :fire-breathing Deity of the British evangelicals and nonconformists) had endowed individuals with an innate sense of social morality that would naturally surface given the appropriate political conditions, namely, an environment that encouraged co operation and democratic, participatory government. The English Christian Socialists were convinced, however, that none of this could come to fruition while the working classes were alienated from religion. This alienation could be laid directly at the door of the Victorian churches, whose leaders, in the words of K. S. Inglis, cared less about the material and spiritual welfare ofthe work ing classes than the workers were alleged to care about religion.24 A number of significant associations emerged from Christian Socialist circles. One of the first was Stewart Headlam's Anglo Catholic Guild of St. Matthew, established in 1877. The guild had links to the earlier Oxford movement and the Fabian Society (Head lam being on the "left wing" of that group) . Headlam advocated what was called "sacramental socialism," arguing that the holy sacra ments, especially the Mass, were expressions of a true Christian socialism. Those affiliated with the Guild of St. Matthew and the other socialist associations that grew out of it, the Christian Social Union and the Christian Socialist League, focused on the doctrine of the Incarnation, the role of Christ as man in the secular world, and his redemptive and sanctifying message for all men.
9 0 CATHOLIC I NTELLECTUALS A N D T H E CHALLENGE O F D E M O C RACY
Much like Cardinal Manning, who condemned the old Catho lics for their aloofness from the common man, those in the Guild of St. Matthew despaired of an Established Church that had distanced itself from the urban laboring masses, catering, instead, to Tory squires and the new captains ofindustry. The guild worked to bring the Church of England closer to the people and, at the same time, proposed a redistribution of wealth and expanded opportunities for the masses to participate more fully in the process of governance. There were good practical reasons for the Guild of St. Matthew to be concerned with such matters. The general economic downturn that set in by the early l88os had produced levels of unemployment on a scale far greater than ever before. Not only were the effects of unemployment uncomfortably visible to the prospering classes, but those affected by recession were no longer willing to stay quietly behind doors, patiently waiting for the trade cycle to revive as it so often had in the past. In the spring of 1886, for instance, unruly crowds of poor smashed the windows of fashionable clubs in Lon don's West End and looted shops in Piccadilly. Capitalism seemed to be faltering, and the Guild of St. Matthew believed it was nec essary to prepare Anglicans to apply the Gospels to the ensuing social and economic breakdown. The real significance of Headlam's association was that it attracted a variety of bright and talented people dedicated to pro viding Christian social and political leadership. Initially laboring under the tutelage of the Guild of St. Matthew, many of them became the catalysts for more radical and influential movements such as Guild Socialism. An important offspring of the Guild of St. Matthew was the Christian Social Union (CSU), founded during the London dock strike of 1889. The Union's birth was marked by the publication of a book of essays edited by Charles Gore called Lux Mundi: A Series ofStudies in the Religion ofthe Incarnation. The book attempted to explain the centrality of the Christian faith for resolving the major moral and intellectual issues of the times. In addition, the authors emphasized the responsibility of owning private property, which, they insisted, must be recognized as a public trust involving explic itly social obligations. It was the book's insistence on applying
The Appearance of the "Chesterbelloc" 9 1
Christianity to political and social matters that led to the establish ment of the Christian Social Union. This organization's main pur pose was to study and publicize social and economic problems, and its members were prepared to draw on Pope Leo XIII's writings to make their points. The failure of the Anglican Church hierarchy to take a lead in resolving the London dock strike was an embarrass ment to its membership, and one of the Union's first tasks was to counter the public's impression that only the Catholic leadership namely, Manning--was prepared to take up the cause of labor. Borrowing techniques from the Fabian Society, of which many of its associates were members, the CSU mounted a campaign to educate the public about social problems. One prominent member, F. L. Donaldson, gained notoriety by telling his followers that "Christianity is the religion ofwhich socialism is the practice" 25 and insisting that a truly Christian state had the obligation to find em ployment for workers if the private sector failed to do so. The CSU practiced what it preached through activist social programs. In 1893, for instance, it published a "white list" of firms that supported trade union wages and recommended that its members patronize them. Various Christian Social Union local branches initiated a Chris tian "buyers boycott" of companies that were anti-union, a policy that would be copied by the Distributist League in the interwar years. A special research committee of the CSU investigated the problem of housing for the poor and the issue of drunkenness. Some local branches of the Union undertook detailed studies of working conditions and sent them to the press, the home secretary, and members of Parliament. The Christian Social Union's influence in the House of Commons played an important role in shaping the Factory and Workshops Act of 1901 and the Trade Boards Act of 1909. Flushed with the confidence that comes with having influence, one CSU member, Percy Dearmer, boasted that the association was becoming "an informal committee of the English Church upon social questions. "26 Another issue that galvanized the energies of the Christian Social Union was British imperialism, in particular, the South African Boer War of 1899-1902. The two chief figures of the CSU, Charles Gore and Scott Holland, were especially disturbed by the popular
9 2 CATHOLIC I N T ELLECTUALS A N D T H E CHALLENGE O F D E M O C RACY
jingoism that sustained Britain's overseas expansion. Their voices of protest were joined by several other young members of the Union, notably Conrad Noel, whose powerful sermons against munitions makers led to threats to blow up his church,27 and Gilbert Keith Chesterton. These men believed that the Boer War was the prod uct of a capitalist plot carried out by international mining interests: it was a classic example of what the journalist J. A. Hobson had called "economic imperialism" in search of new markets and invest ment opportunities.28 G. K. Chesterton's writings on the Boer War first brought him into the public spotlight. In 1899 he joined The Speaker, a radical Liberal publication that had been taken over by a group of Hilaire Belloc's Oxford friends who hoped to use the paper as a lever for moving the Liberal Party toward the cause of social justice. Under the direction of J. L. Hammond, E. C. Bentley, and others, The Speaker soon became a major voice of anti-imperialism, arguing that the war in South Africa was brought about by capitalist wire-pullers in quest of new economic opportunities. Chesterton articulated an ironic critique of the war: he said he supported the Boers because he himself was a good English nationalist. As opposed to the particu laristic nationalism of Rudyard Kipling, which ignored the patri otism of others, Chesterton expressed a sympathy for the rights and customs of all ethnic groups. Thus he supported the Boers chiefly because they were willing to take to horse and ride in defense of their farms against intruders. Chesterton's concept of nationalism was simply incompatible with imperialism. True British patriots, said he, could never be imperialists, "for if they believed in nation ality they could not really believe in empire, because the cosmopoli tan idea tends to destroy the nationality of others."29 Yet Chesterton was not necessarily pro-Boer; he opposed the war mainly because it was unjust and degraded the honor of England. Chesterton quickly developed a reputation as the bete noire of the imperialist Fabians who rallied around George Bernard Shaw. Shaw defended the war on the grounds that it would serve to bring benighted savages into the mainstream of civilization via the British Empire. Chesterton considered this defense of imperialism the mortal enemy of patriotism and an affront to human dignity. He defined imperialism as an attempt by a European country to create
The Appearance of the "Chesterbelloc" 93
a sham Europe which it could dominate, instead of the real Europe, which it could only share: "It is a love of living with one's inferiors."30 Imperialism was the enemy of liberty, for it negated the deepest of democratic principles-it denied the equality of man by imposing "our standards" on another nation, yet learning nothing from them. 31 And, of course, it denied true liberty, which, Chesterton had come to believe, could be attained only within a defined sphere of activity and by wielding power over "small things." The anti-imperialists of the Christian Social Union made head lines with their scathing criticism of the Boer War. They were less effective in bringing their social views to the English working classes. On the whole, the CSU's chief impact was on the hierarchy of the Church of England, where it managed to generate considerable sen sitivity toward economic and social problems, including the plight of labor, and a recognition of Christian socialism as a possible remedy for such ills. For the radical members who wanted more than papers and speeches on social evils-men like G. K. Chester ton and Conrad Noel-this was not enough. Noel claimed that the Union lacked a clear dogma on theology and politics, that it had no "fixed standard" by which to direct or judge social reform.32 Chesterton expressed his concerns in verse, in one instance sug gesting how CSU speakers on the stump might appear to typical Nottingham tradesmen: The Christian Social Union here Was very much annoyed; It seems there is some duty Which we never should avoid, And so they sing a lot of hymns To help the Unemployed. Upon a platform at the end The speakers were displayed And Bishop Hoskins stood in front And hit a bell and said That Mr. Carter was to pray, And Mr. Carter prayed.
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Then Bishop Gore of Birmingham He stood upon one leg And said he would be happier If beggars didn't beg, And that if they pinched his palace It would take him down a peg. He said that Unemployment Was a horror and a blight, He said that charities produced Servility and spite, And stood upon the other leg And said it wasn't right. And then a man named Chesterton Got up and played with water, He seemed to say that principles Were nice and led to slaughter And how we always compromised And how we didn't orter. Then Canon Holland fired ahead Like fifty cannons firing, We tried to find out what he meant With infinite enquiring, But the way he made the windows jump We couldn't help admiring. He said the human soul should be ashamed of every sham, He said a man should constantly Ejaculate "I am'' . . . when he had done, I went outside And got into a tram. 33 The Christian Socialist League (CSL) was established in 1906 by those associated with the Guild of St. Matthew and the Chris-
The Appearance of the "Chesterbelloc" 95
tian Social Union who wanted a movement that was primarily devoted to socialist political action-therefore in touch with trade union activities-and more liberal in religion. Membership would be open to persons of all faiths (thus assuring that the organization would be less homogeneous than the Anglo-Catholic, upper-class Guild of St. Matthew and the CSU) and to those who were will ing to commit themselves to a democratic commonwealth founded on "economic socialism," in which wealth would be owned collec tively by the community. The members of the CSL varied widely in the radicalism of their political and social views and included such diverse people as George Lansbury, the future leader of the Labour Party, Conrad Noel, who would become known as the "red priest" of Thaxted, ]. N. Figgis, the father of "political pluralism'' and a major influence on the later development of Guild Socialism, and the brothers Cecil and G. K. Chesterton. The CSL soon became involved in the wave of working-class unrest that swept England in the years preceed ing the outbreak of World War I. Conrad Noel, a close friend of the Chestertons and a stalwart warrior in many of the causes for which the brothers so ardently crusaded, was typical of the political mili tancy of the association when he wrote in 1912 that the main hope of the future was in "the revolt of the people against their 'leaders' as manifest in sympathetic strikes and the general labour unrest."34 Noel's views were undergirded by Christian teaching. He claimed that he was an advocate of"Catholic Socialism," the seeds of which were found in the teachings of the early Church fathers, who he believed, were radical revolutionaries committed to the sharing of property and full-scale democracy.35 Perhaps the most radical member of the Christian Socialist Lea guers, a group whom the Anglican bishops called "dangerous men," was Cecil Chesterton. As leader of the League's militant wing, Chesterton vigorously opposed the association's dealings with the Liberal Party and urged that only candidates who were avowedly socialist should be given CSL support. 36 One of these "dangerous men," Gilbert Keith Chesterton, had the greatest impact on modern English Catholicism.37 G. K. C., as he was popularly known, was raised in a Unitarian family. In his
9 6 CATHOLIC I N T E LLECTUALS AND T H E CHALLENGE OF D E M O C RACY
early years Chesterton developed Anglican connections and quickly gained a reputation as a defender of Christian orthodoxy. In 1922 he converted to Catholicism, though many argued that he had been a Catholic long before then. One of his first books, Heretics (1905), was an attack on what he considered the great "errors" of his age. Its cen tral argument was that Chesterton's contemporaries-Shaw, Wells, Kipling, and others-had fallen victim to the fad of progress, a mad worshipping of change and all things new in the unfounded belief that they would assure social improvement. None of these "heretics," claimed G. K. C., had established any ethical standards upon which to measure progress: Nobody has any business to use the word 'progress' unless he has a definite creed and a cast-iron code of morals . . . . For progress by its very name indicates a direction; and the moment we are the least doubtful about the direction, we become in the same degree doubtful about progress. Never perhaps since the begin ning of the world has there been an age that had less right to use the word 'progress' than we. 38 Chesterton announced his own solution to moral anarchy with the publication in 1908 of Orthodoxy. He too, he explained, had been a heretic, that is, he had sincerely tried to be original and struggled to find a "heresy of my own." However, when he prepared to put the final coat of paint on his worldview, he discovered it was ortho doxy. It was not that his new, painfully chiseled truths were false but only that they were not his: "When I fancied that I stood alone I was really in the ridiculous position of being backed up by all of Christendom. "39 In Orthodoxy Chesterton asserted that Christian theology, as expressed in the Apostle's Creed, was the basis of sound ethics and the provider of a dual spiritual need, "the need for that mixture of the familiar and the unfamiliar which Christendom had rightly named romance. For the very word 'Romance' has in it the mystery and the ancient meaning of Rome."4° Chesterton's answer to the heretics was a reaffirmation of traditional Christianity, which he dis covered was the foundation from which his own liberal sympathies and orientations had evolved.
The Appearance of the "Chesterbelloc" 97
Orthodoxy was also a defence of Chesterton's beliefin and com mitment to liberal politics. Chesterton's liberalism rested on the idea that the individual could reach his fullest potential in a democratic environment of limited government ("the most terribly important things must be left to ordinary men themselves")41 founded on Christian religious traditions. From his understanding of history and psychology, Chesterton regarded it as natural for man to search for religion: "Christianity seeks after God with the most elementary passion it can find, the craving for a father, the hunger that is as old as the hills."42 Finally, for Chesterton, Christianity provided the only solid base from which democracy could be justified, for it asserted the twin dogmas that all men are made in the image of God (even the poor) and that all men are tainted with original sin (even the rich).43 Chesterton's spiritual resolution was based on his conviction that there was divine order in the world, a pattern revealed, as he said, in "the green architecture that builds itself without visible hands" yet follows a design already drawn in the air by an invisible finger. 44 The admission of such a plan brought with it the recognition that some one else, some strange and unseen force, had designed the universe. As a young man Chesterton was keenly interested in politics, and his views on the subject evolved from moderate (he was a Chris tian socialist at the turn of the century) to radical (he supported anarcho-syndicalism on the eve of World War I). As early as 1900, however, he recognized a disturbing pattern in parliamentary poli tics: the parties tended to curb the views of their more unconven tional members so as not to disturb the political establishment.45 Nevertheless, always considering himself a "true Liberal," Chester ton supported the Liberal Party in the first few years of the cen tury. He hoped that a dedicated group of reformers working within the system might be able to push the parties toward positive change. In 1902, for example, he joined Conrad Noel, C. F. G. Masterman, and others in establishing the "Patriot's Club," a group who wanted to force Liberal MPs to pay more attention to the living conditions of the poor.46 It also was in the hopes of altering the Liberal Party's stand on imperialism that Chesterton had joined the Speaker group in opposition to the Boer War. Chesterton's faith in the Liberal Party's ability to respond to such inside, reformist pressures was put to the test after the general
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election of 1905, which gave that party the opportunity to form a new government. When the leadership failed to carry out its cam paign promises (among others, the promise to use state power to enforce wage contracts) and when Chesterton discovered that it prohibited certain Liberal MPs from speaking out on their convic tions for the sake of political stability, his fears and suspicions of inter-party collusion in the interests of high finance were powerfully confirmed. The problem with government, he observed in the fall of 1905, was not serious disagreement between bitterly divided fac tions but the fact that the parties were essentially united as a single "governing class."47 Chesterton's disillusionment with the political system soon spread to the Liberal press as well. Prior to the 1905 election, the newspapers for which he wrote (Alfred Harmsworth's Daily Mail, the London Times, and George Cadbury's Daily News) had led the charge of corruption against the Conservative government. But once the Liberals were in power, articles critical of the government ceased to appear. When Chesterton's own essays were censored, he con cluded that the press, like the political parties themselves, had falle n under the control of a few rich men who were dedicated to the preservation of the status quo. During the first decade of the new century Chesterton also came to recognize another evil, even more insidious than the plu tocratic corruption of party and press. This was the threat to indi vidual liberties contained in socialism. If followed to its collectivist end, socialism would sacrifice the individual to the machinery of the state. This end was particularly evident in the programs of the Fabian Society, which aimed to centralize the political powers of the state, turning over governance to bureaucratic experts trained in the science of efficiency. The Fabian engineers could assure, in the words of Sidney Webb, that each individual would fu1fi11 "in the best possible way, his humble function in the great social machine."48 Beatrice and Sidney Webb, major forces behind the Fabian Society, had a lingering distaste for and suspicion of the laboring classes and felt it necessary to discipline them in order to maintain social order. For Sidney Webb, the masses were "apathetic, dense, unreceptive to any unfamiliar idea."49 For this kind of socialist, revolution did not
The Appearance of the "Chesterbelloc" 99
mean immersing oneself with and becoming part of the masses to bring on equality and justice; it meant rather a program of intellec tual coercion which "we," the "clever ones," would impose upon "them," the lower orders. 50 This frame of mind was best typified by George Bernard Shaw, who envisioned the working classes as little more than children to be amused but disciplined. This was Shaw's advice to his fellow Fabians: "never give the people anything they want: give them something they ought to want and don't."51 G. K. Chesterton had contended that the Fabians were work ing not for a classless society but rather for a planned society via the introduction of a bureaucratic form of socialism. H. G. Wells, for example, had complained that Marx's notion of socialism was "unattractive to people who had any real knowledge of administra tion'' and was grateful for the Fabian Society's converting "Revolu tionary S ocialism into Administrative Socialism."52 This kind of thinking also betrayed a deep contempt for democracy, which threat ened not only the freedoms of Englishmen but also those of the citi zens of other lands. Shaw contended that "the world is to the big and powerful states by necessity, and the little ones must come within their border or be crushed out of existence." Sidney Webb, no less an imperialist zealot than Shaw, was convinced that the future would belong to "the great administrative nations, where the officials govern and the police keep order."53 For the Fabians, the Victorian scramble for empire, raising its ugly head in the Boer Wars, was inspired by "love of one's country" and a natural part of the struggle for existence. It was denounced by G. K. Chesterton as a perversion of patriotism. What these people meant by the love of country, he claimed, "was not what a mystic might mean by the love of God" but more like what "a child might mean by a love of . . 1am. " Ch esterton c alle d r1or a "renaissance o f true 1ove " I:ror one 's native land, which could only be discovered and cultivated through a better understanding of history: What have we done, and where have we wandered, we that have produced sages who could have spoken with Socrates and poets who could walk with Dante, that we should talk as if we have never done anything more intelligent than found colonies and
IOO
CATHOLIC I N T E LLECTUALS AND T H E CHALLENGE OF D E M O C RACY
kick niggers? We are the children of light, and it is we that sit in darkness. If we are judged, it will not be for the merely intel lectual transgression of failing to appreciate other nations, but for the supreme spiritual transgression of failing to appreciate ourselves. 54 Chesterton eventually turned his back on socialism for two rea sons: it approached the problem of reform from the perspective of the state, not of the individual, and it depended on a false theory of human nature. Social reform imposed from above by the state could never be durable because it did not directly involve those whom it was deemed to benefit, namely, the common man. From a moral and pragmatic standpoint, Chesterton believed that people must participate individually in any programs that would affect their personal lives. Reform directed from above, outside the communi ties in which the individual associates, would also stifle democracy, since the state would be usurping initiative from the agents of pri mary socialization, namely the family, the workplace, and so forth. Chesterton clearly realized that the advocates of collectivism were building the engines of big government that potentially could wield totalitarian control over its citizens. In his view, the collectivist em phasis on efficiency and the rationalization of centralized planning were contrary to human nature. The collectivists' programs would strengthen the state at the expense of the basic social institution of the family, which he viewed as the wellspring of liberty and the source of creativity. Chesterton's analysis of the problems of socialism and his appreciation of the family as the basic unit of good living, the keystone of all social systems, followed very closely the principles upon which Pope Leo XIII had constructed Rerum Novarum. II
The other half of that pantomime beast-the quadruped that Shaw had called the "Chesterbelloc"-that was Hilaire Belloc. Unlike the convert Chsterton, Belloc was born into the Catholic Church. As a young man, he fell under the influence of his family's friend, Car dinal Henry Edward Manning. While living in London before
The Appearance of the "Chesterbelloc" IOI
going up to Oxford, he visited Manning at every opportunity. Belloc recalled how much he admired the man for never having "admit ted the possibility of compromise between Catholic and non Catholic society. He perceived the necessary conflict and gloried in it."55 (The young Belloc's enthusiasm probably fell short of endors ing his mentor's teachings on the evil of drink. Even Belloc's mother, a close friend of Manning's, parted with the good Cardinal on this issue: when he talked teetotalism, wrote Belloc, mother thought it "most unworthy of him to have anything to do with such vulgar rubbish.")5 6 If imitation is the best form of flattery, Belloc's early career would have made Manning proud. There were few in England more uncompromising than Belloc on matters of faith. Like the cardinal, Belloc's Catholicism was ultramontane and continental, and his dis like of the old English Catholic families, whom he considered insu lar and arrogant, was every bit as strong as Manning's. Indeed, Belloc was convinced that the old families were a major obstacle to the progress of the faith itself. As a group, he asserted, they were wedded to the Protestant establishment. This betrayal of the cause revealed itself in their tendencies to sympathize more with the American Puritan traditions than with those of the immigrant Irish, Poles, and Germans who represented a vigorous brand of Catholi cism that threatened the complacency of the rich and comfortable.57 The old Catholic families were "invariably ignorant" on all subjects of public importance: "They dislike all nations of Catholic culture; they detest the Irish; they loathe the French; and down to the small est details they try to be as like the anti-Catholic atmosphere of our wealthy society as they can manage."58 Manning also became Belloc's political mentor, though, as was the case with Chesterton, it would take some hands-on political experience before Belloc fully accepted the Cardinal's positions. Manning was outspokenly contemptuous of the parliamentary party system, being convinced that party labels were nothing but camouflages for greed: Whig and Tory are names without equivalents. The Revolu tion of 1688 whipped them both out. The parliamentary title of the Crown equalises both. They survive as two forms of class
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selfishness. The aristocratic selfishness and the well-to-do self ishness. Liberal and Conservative are still more unmeaning. The law and constitution of England excludes all such politi cal sections. 59 It was only natural that Belloc would enter the political arena as a Liberal. He was a descendant of the radical philosopher and sci entist Joseph Priestly and the grandson ofJoseph Parkes, founder of the Reform Club and a major leader of the Liberal Party.60 Belloc's mother, Bessie Parkes, followed closely her father's political incli nations. She had married Louis Belloc of La Celle Saint Cloud in France, where Hilaire was born and where he spent the early, impressionable years of his life. These were to be bittersweet memo ries, however, for the family's life at La Celle Saint Cloud was rudely interrupted by the Franco-Prussian War and the subsequent occu pation of the village by Prussian troops. The Belloc family estate was looted and left in ruins. This episode had much to do with Belloc's life-long hatred of Germany, in his mind a truly evil empire which he persisted in calling "Prussia." Belloc appreciated Cardinal Manning's love of democracy and his Christian-style socialism, which ultimately reached maturity in the "third way'' of Leo XIII's Rerum Novarum. Belloc quickly rec ognized the wisdom of Manning's and Leo XIII's dual condemna tion of both the callous rich who exploited the laboring poor and the equally distorted collectivist reaction to unfettered capitalism. Under the guidance of Manning, Rerum Novarum and especially its emphasis on the "duty of the state" to fight injustice and to "pro tect the poor and helpless" became the cornerstones for all of Bel loc's subsequent sociopolitical and economic ideas.61 Belloc's youthful days in London, punctuated by memorable vis its with Manning, constituted a heady, idealistic interlude before he encountered socialism and democracy as actually practiced in the English political system. At the age of nineteen, Belloc was swept up by enthusiasm for the great London dock strike, a classic con frontation between the capitalist bosses and the exploited workers freshly aroused by the sense of class consciousness. Along with mobs of workers, Belloc trekked through the streets of London to hear strike leaders like John Burns defy imprisonment for the sake of
The Appearance of the "Chesterbelloc" rn3
telling tales of a new and better world to come through the gospel of socialism. These were genuine passions, Belloc would later write, before the socialist creed was taken over by the politicians for the sham battles at Westminster: The leaders did desire, and did think they could achieve an England in which the poor should be poor no longer, and in which there should be sustenance and happiness for all. They did still believe the amazing proposition that what they called 'the community'-that is, in practice, the politicians-could own all we have and handle it with a superhuman justice. Great God! They believed it! 62 But through all this stress and storm nothing came: "The mill turned noisily enough, but it ground not corn." 63 This observation, how ever, was made with hindsight, after Belloc's own efforts in the political mill ground no corn. The public career of Hilaire Belloc began auspiciously while he was a student at Oxford University. In 1894 he was one of the few Roman Catholics to have enrolled at Oxford following the 1871 act that opened English universities to Roman Catholics. Partly through his brilliant speeches at the Oxford Union, Belloc quickly developed a reputation as a militant Catholic, a defendant of all things French (he was the only undergraduate who could claim to have served in the French army before entering the university), and an unabashed advocate of democracy. There may have been a touch of the exotic about Belloc, but, on the other hand, he was clearly an influential force on campus. The weight of his opinions can be measured by the publication of Essays in Liberalism, a collection of discourses by Belloc and several of his friends (F. Y. Eccles, ]. S. Phillimore, J. L. Hammond, ]. A. Simon, and F. W. Hirst) who later became the leading lights behind The Speaker. The book's introduction noted that the writers had been primarily inspired and guided by Belloc's political vision. Already, in this early collection of essays, Belloc revealed his concerns about the threat of state power to individual freedoms. The book's con tributors recommended a return to the "fundamental principles of Liberalism'' as an antidote to statist tendencies. Belloc's conception
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of Liberalism, however, reposed on the democratic principle that such a political system could be legitimized only if each member of the community played a part in the government he was to obey. 64 He also asserted that a truly free citizen must be politically and eco nomically independent. In order to assure this independence, Bel loc drew on the teachings of Rerum Novarum to advocate a wider distribution of private property. The sociopolitical positions set forth in Essays in Liberalism were so unorthodox that the Oxford under graduate journal, The Isis, felt compelled to point out that they did not correspond to any recognized opinion within the parliamentary Liberal Party. In addition to his unconventional ideas on Liberalism, a number ofother positions and attitudes marked Belloc as a man on the fringes. The most troublesome were his views on Jews. Anti-Semitism was rife in turn-of-the-century English upper-class circles, but Belloc's views were more strident and systematic than most. The roots of Belloc's thinking about Jews and of his antiliber alism, the latter of which emerged after his career as Member of Parliament, can be traced to the French Right. Belloc was exposed to this tradition while a young conscript in the French army, fol lowing which he became an avid reader of Charles Maurras, the anti-Semitic monarchist editor of Action Franfaise. 6 5 As a young man in France, Belloc also had developed a close friendship with his neighbor, Paul Deroulede, and had joined his Lique de Patriotes. 66 A major purpose of the Lique de Patriotes, besides taking to the streets to pressure French politicians to recover the lost provinces of Alsace and Lorraine, was to attack the defenders of Alfred Drey fus, a Jewish officer in the French army who was unjustly accused of spying for the Germans. Deroulede's Lique recruited men of the political right to oppose those who defended Dreyfus. Deroulede, a "Don Qyixote in an Inverness cape," as Henri de Rochefort called him, was an ardent patriot and, like Belloc, an admirer of Jacobin Republicanism. But he was opposed to the Third Republic because of its financial corruption, parliamentary instability, and its pusil lanimous policy toward Germany. The source of these problems, Deroulede believed, had much to do with the political and economic influence of]ews.
The Appearance of the "Chesterbelloc" ro5
The Dreyfus affair was a major influence on Belloc's views con cerningJews. Like the ultra-patriotic French Right, he believed that a reexamination of Dreyfus's guilt could only hurt the French army and that the demand for a retrial was being engineered by a small group ofJewish financiers. Belloc's anger over the whole affair never abated, and he remained convinced that the vindication of Dreyfus destroyed the French Intelligence Bureau and was responsible for prolonging World War I. In Belloc's mind, the unfortunate Drey fus episode shed light on a dark, dirty secret: the existence of a Jew ish power bloc with enormous influence in international political and economic circles. Belloc's militant Catholicism and his strident views on Jews and politics, combined with what must be called an overbearing per sonality, did not endear him to the Oxford academic establishment. These liabilities were responsible for his rejection as a Fellow, a blow from which he never fully recovered. It seems that many of Belloc's friends and mentors, in particular, Dr. Benjamin Jowett, had given him assurances that a fellowship was his for the asking. Belloc claimed that he based his career plans on that calculation, but that when the time arrived he was turned down for religious reasons. In particular, said Belloc, the dons objected to his historiography, which emphasized the effect of religion on behavior, and to the way in which Catholicism informed his public views. 67 Such ideas clashed with their own. One college after another turned him down, and in this way, claimed Belloc, he wasted the first critical years of his life: "It was too late to go to the Bar, and I had no capital upon which to live until briefs should come in. I went to London, and have had to earn my living since then as best I could."68 In future there would be many literary skirmishes with Oxbridge dons, and Belloc seems to have relished the opportunity of tweaking their scholarly noses: Hunting Dons is almost as much fun as establishing Roman roads. I know all the didges [dodges?] for making them break cover and just where to stand to shoot them in the thorax when they get out of the wood into the stubble. I never wing them, I always kill. 69
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Belloc also developed unorthodox views on Catholicism itself, which, when taken with his revisionistic ideas on English and Euro pean history, seemed downright revolutionary. He was convinced that European culture was fundamentally Catholic-that was what he meant by the controversial expression "Europe is the faith and the faith is Europe"-and that it would have to reject Protestantism or perish. Since Belloc viewed Catholicism as both religion and cul ture, for him a temporal loyalty and a spiritual loyalty to Rome were essentially inseparable. This kind of thinking, redolent of the views of continental "integralist" Catholics, provides a key for under standing Belloc's position on the issue of European imperialism and his condemnation of England's role in the Boer War. Belloc simply opposed anything that in his opinion served to destroy the unity of the Roman Church. With violent prejudice overruling historical integrity, he hated the Hohenzollerns because they brought Protes tantism to Germany; he disdained the Jews because in defiance of the Christian corporate ethic they made money-making the raison d'etre of life and work; he condemned the entire development of capitalism since it destroyed the legacy of imperial Rome as it was reborn in the cultural unity of medieval Christendom. Imperialism was simply an extension of the money-grubbing which had destroyed the medieval social and political order. Belloc's identification of Catholicism as culture was similar to that of the French Restoration writers Joseph de Maistre, Frarn;:ois Rene Chateaubrian, and Louis de Bonald (likely influences on Bel loc's thinking, though he never admitted it), as well as the Vogel sang circle in Vienna. But unlike these Catholic reactionaries, Belloc welcomed the French Revolution. At first glance his political views appear contradictory: he was an advocate of monarchism and appre ciated the strong hand of dictatorship, yet called himself a demo crat and a republican. This paradox can be bridged by understanding Belloc as both Jacobite and Jacobin, a fusion symbolized in his romantic attachment to the medieval aristocratic order and simul taneous admiration for the revolutionary forces in France that purged the old order after it had become decadent.70 As John P. McCarthy has shown, the Jacobin tendencies predominated in Bel loc's early career, during the years of labor unrest before the Great War and while he tried to bring democratic change through the
The Appearance of the "Chesterbelloc" 107
political system as Member of Parliament (1906-1910) .71 After Bel loc became disillusioned with the possibility of bringing change through Britain's existing institutions, the Jacobite strain came to the surface and prevailed throughout his later years, when he identified himself as a monarchist. Yet his willingness to entertain the idea of revolution endured. When parliamentary democracy was under siege on the continent during the 1930s, Belloc wrote his American friend Hoffman Nickerson (no devotee of democracy himself) that when such institutional practices had gone beyond mending, "one's first duty is to get rid of it, there will always be something likely to take its place."72 Belloc's Jacobin attachments grew out of his admiration of Greco-Roman culture. The Romans civilized Europe by preserving the culture of Greece, and they brought political unity by extending throughout Europe their own language, laws, and civic institutions. The political genius of the Romans forged a variety of ethnic groups over disparate geographical areas into a single state. Just as the Roman Empire had kept alive the higher tradition of Greece, so, Belloc argued, the Church, in the face ofbarbarian and Islamic inva sion, had preserved and revitalized the institutions of Rome. The civilization of Roman Catholic Europe reached its zenith in the High Middle Ages from the eleventh to the fourteenth century. This was a golden age in Belloc's mind, a world stabilized by the great guilds and a time in which the common man was approach ing full economic freedom through the possession of private prop erty. Belloc believed that the Stuart monarchs in England had fought to preserve these traditions against the Protestant ascen dancy, a land-grabbing clique who stole monastic properties. The Protestant clique had prevailed and had replaced the old order (unlike eighteenth-century France, the English system at the time of the Stuarts was still vital and pure) with an oligarchy of special interests. Belloc's vast historical writings elaborated on these basic themes and were designed to counter the Whig bias that prevailed in English academic circles. He disdained the Gibbon-Macaulay historiographical canons, which emphasized the development of parliamentary government and the curbing of monarchical prerog ative, because they exalted the forces which had destroyed Catholic
I08 CATHOLIC I N T E LLECTUALS AND T H E CHALLENGE OF D E M O C RACY
universalism and the social structure of the Middle Ages, and they eulogized an event (the abolition of the monasteries) that helped spawn a new class of predatory capitalists.73 Belloc even went so far as to argue that this historiographical tradition was the single most important factor preventing England's return to the Catholic fold.74 Coupled with Belloc's detestation of Whig historiography was an abhorrence of the rich. He disliked the wealthy primarily because they were corruptors of politics and exploiters of the poor. Belloc's loyalty to what he defined as Republicanism seems to have been related to his antipathy toward the rich and privileged. Yet Belloc parted ways with most Catholic intellectuals who steadfastly supported the memory of the ancien regime. Belloc's defense of the French Revolution seems puzzling, given its attack on the Catholic Church. Belloc believed, however, that the Revo lution was never the enemy of Catholicism as such, nor did he see any incompatibility between the Church and the democratic spirit behind the Revolution, since the Church by tradition was a defender of the poor and a proponent of social justice. The conflict between Catholicism and Revolution, according to Belloc, was part of a misunderstanding caused in large part by the corruption of the eighteenth-century Gallican Church. Isolated from Rome and co opted by the privileged, the French Church had distanced itself from the common people and had fallen into a state of decay. Because of its identification with the excesses of the old regime-"the State wore Catholic clothes"75-the Church was the most visible object of attack for those who hoped to rejuvenate the community. As an official institution of absolutism, the French Catholic Church was but a portion of the world which the populace hated and which they thought it necessary to destroy. Nor could it be defended adequately. The religious orders were too devoid of spiritual energy, too far removed from the life of the nation, to rise in its defense. Those aris tocrats who rallied to the Church's cause did so, not because they understood the faith, but because they viewed it as an integral part of the privileged order of which they were a part. However, the revo lutionaries erred in thinking the institution moribund; their Civil Constitution of the Clergy had the effect of turning a small minority who were true Catholics in France against the Revolution.
The Appearance of the "Chesterbelloc" 109
Belloc always insisted that the Revolution was necessary. The old order had decayed to the point that radical surgery was required to restore the community to health. The organs of government "had become stiff with age, and had to be supplanted."76 An admirer of Rousseau, Belloc interpreted the French Revolution as an expres sion of the "general will," the vehicle through which the commu nal spirit manifested itsel£ Yet Belloc did not believe that this will was always best expressed through representative government. After his bitter experiences with English politics, he concluded that par liamentary forms of government were simply mechanisms by which the wealthy could rule.77 In his view, the principles of democracy and justice were best implemented through the forceful personality of an enlightened monarch, who could rise above petty politics, avoid the temptations of avarice, and guide the state in the best interest of the general will. It was on such ground that Belloc championed Napoleon as a savior of the French Revolution: his significance was the substitution of personal rule for oligarchy. Napoleon became the "incarnation of the community in one man'' as against the plutoc racy that was always the fruit of "representative government."78 Napoleon had succeeded in providing a force for integration that bound French society together in a corporate whole. Belloc believed that men in large numbers could not be so organized save under monarchy or a traditional governing class (an aristocracy) that won the loyalty of the masses. The Revolution had torn up France by the roots, having been triggered by the failure of the two traditional integrative mechanisms (monarchical and aristocratic) to command the loyalty of the people. Napoleon, for Belloc, represented an effort "to re-found" a new set of values that could bind the nation together. The noble experiment failed because Napoleon was defeated. Yet Belloc would never accept the proposition that the French Revo lution had caused the crisis in modern politics. The real disaster, he claimed, was not the events of 1789 but rather a deep religious malig nancy: "the Calvinist organisation which spread and strengthened itself, preventing spiritual unity from its origin to our day."79 Belloc played a small, controversial, but perhaps important role in modern English historiography in that he, like R. H. Tawney, convinced many to look more closely at religion as a motivating
no
CATHOLIC I NTELLECTUALS A N D T H E CHALLENGE O F D E M O C RACY
force for historical change. Douglas Woodruff, the influential edi tor of the London Tablet, was a great admirer of Belloc because he broke the convention of treating religion as strictly a personal matter. As opposed to other historians who dismissed the faith as a causal factor in public behavior and who therefore concealed historical truth, said Woodruff, Belloc shed new light on the religious motives behind historical events. He was simply ahead of his time, though, as Woodruff argued in r949, his positions had become much more obvious with the rise of Lenin and Hitler and their war against the Christian religion. 80 Belloc's historiography was motivated not merely by a genuinely felt need to correct what he regarded as the institutionalized bias of Whig historians. He also intended to retaliate against the aca demics at Oxford whom he believed had conspired to prevent him from exercising his talents as a historian. Belloc claimed that these university-sanctioned propagandists deceived their readers through a smoke screen of spurious footnotes and other such academic para phernalia, which upon close investigation could not support their tendentious arguments. Belloc's histories were lucidly written, but he wrote too much and he did so with hurried hand. Privately Belloc admitted to these faults, arguing that he was obliged to publish prolifically in order to support his considerable family: "my children scream for caviar and pearls."81 Such mercenary labor, Belloc always insisted, was necessitated by his having been turned down for a fellowship at All Souls. These burdens were made all the greater because he had to write for an audience that hated his faith. Unlike the books of writ ers like Lytton Strachey, "who copied me a great deal," claimed Bel loc, there was no popular market for works like Napoleon. How could American and English readers understand the idea of a hero uniting Europe and resurrecting the Roman Empire?82 After his parliamentary experiences and controversial journalistic crusades, Belloc was essentially shut out of the English popular press83 and, to earn a living, wrote increasingly for the American market. 84 The necessity of drawing on an American audience was a con siderable annoyance. It was "heart breaking work," Belloc wrote his friend Lady Frances Phipps, stooping to "third-rate American Catho lic papers" for subsistence. The readers were "completely unedu-
The Appearance of the "Chesterbelloc"
cated," making independent thought and the discussion of prob lems other than "the small clerical interests" impossible. It was for these reasons that Belloc so enjoyed writing articles for the far more sophisticated French market. 85 Although Belloc's histories may have been thoroughly re searched, 86 stylistic masterpieces, he defied the most important tenet of the historian's craft by dismissing the necessity of objectivity. 87 Belloc's chief purpose in writing history was to propagate a point of view. Did Belloc's books then speak the truth? The demands of the market make this a difficult question to answer. As he told an ac quaintance who sought his advice on writing books, it is important to separate your work into two parts: "half for livelihood and half for telling the truth. Telling the truth will never provide a livelihood."88 Belloc clearly was not overly sensitive about accuracy in his his torical studies. The Oxford historian Harold Fisher, who knew Bel loc well, told Arnold Lunn that Belloc had absolutely no conscience as a historian, though his books were worth reading for their liter ary merits. Fisher related to Lunn a story about meeting Belloc one hot summer day at the Archives in Paris. Staggering beneath crush ing loads of books, the director of the archives and his assistants were busily preparing a table where Belloc could examine docu ments, pamphlets, and other such materials of every description that he had requested. Upon spotting Fisher, Belloc invited him and the director, a very important man, to lunch. This afforded Belloc the opportunity to hold forth on his favorite theme, that it was flair and not fact that made the historian: "For instance," Belloc elaborated, "M. le Directeur has spent the whole morning collecting books and documents in order that I may adequately document my forthcom ing work on Robespierre. As we sat down to lunch I suddenly had a flair that there will not be a single fact in all those books and docu ments. Consequently I do not propose to return to the Archives this afternoon." The shock on the director's pained face, said Fisher, reminiscent of the back-breaking labor expended in gathering these documents, was "an eloquent tribute to Belloc's theories about the true way to write history."89 The modus operandi of Belloc's historical methodology was more akin to that of Rousseau, a writer with whom he identified be cause of his ability to expound a fundamental dogma based not on
rn
II2 CAT H O L I C I N T ELLECTUALS AND T H E CHALLENGE OF D E M O C RACY
objective facts or the principle of reason but on faith.9 0 To H. G. Wells, Belloc wrote that the historian who tried to write from a dis interested, objective viewpoint was condemned to sterility, because history required a flame of conviction comparable to that of reli gion.91 Just as conviction made the good historian, so, believed Bel loc, the persuasion of personality molded the patterns of history. As opposed to the Marxist school of historiography, which identifies environment as the crucial historical determinant, Belloc seemed to believe in the great man idea. Most of his historical essays concerned personalities (Danton, Napoleon, Robespierre, Richelieu, among others) whose one or two "ideas" or convictions he supposed had shaped the course of history. Perhaps this explains why Belloc searched the bleak political landscape of the 1930s for a great man who could lead Europe out of the impending darkness. III
"Belloc went into Parliament, smelt it and went out again." -George Bernard Shaw92
The mercurial Hilaire Belloc and G. K. Chesterton first became acquainted through their mutual connections with the Speaker group. From the outset, Chesterton was infatuated with Belloc's persona. He was flamboyant, clever, and brazen: "What he brought into our dream was his Roman appetite for reality and for reason in action, and when he came into the door there entered with him the smell of danger. "93 The two writers' styles conflicted. Chesterton's writings were freewheeling and ironic, and in his polemics he came across as self effacing and friendly; Belloc wrote in a classical style, and he was vain, bitingly cynical, and cantankerous in debate. Nevertheless they shared much in common. Along with their anarchistic hostility toward the bureaucratic state was their mutual distaste for almost anything described as "progressive" or "modern." One of Belloc's abiding moral objectives, for example, was to find a means for rein tegrating people with the tradition of Rome, and this meant rescu-
·
The Appearance of the "Chesterbelloc" 113
ing the individual from the rootlessness of modern industrial soci ety. Detached from his Catholic origins, modern man had become a stranger lost in a wilderness of concrete pavements. In addition to their common aversion to imperialism and mod ern "progressivism," Chesterton and Belloc had arrived at similar social and moral opinions. Chesterton's feelings about the sanctity of private property and of small rural communities complemented Belloc's idealization of peasant proprietorship. Belloc believed that there were still certain classic features of European culture preserved in the lives of the peasants he had known as a child living in rural Sussex and earlier in the countryside around La Celle Saint Cloud. There he found a respect for tradition and communal cooperation that came from working the land, generating a sense of rootedness, family closeness, and a set of religious mores that gave shape and coherence to the whole social matrix. This was what Belloc called the "Peasant State," a condition of political freedom with an attach ment to a specific locality and a love for the produce of the soil. The existence of such an independent rural community, said Belloc, could provide a permanent model of good living to the "unstable, nomadic and creedless creatures who inhabited the floating world of the cities."94 Two important experiences provided the practical groundwork for constructing the theory known as Distributism, Chesterton's and Belloc's alternative to the ills of modernity. The first was Belloc's entrance into the House of Commons as a Liberal MP. The sec ond was the cataclysm oflabor unrest that nearly brought Britain to open class warfare on the eve of World War I. These experiences served to define the two writers' essential outlooks regarding the necessary programs for change, provided important insights into the workings of the modern political establishment, sharpened the anarchistic, anti-statist dimension of the Distributist alternative to capitalism and socialism, and created both a wider audience and a coterie of activists for the Distributist mission. Belloc's entrance into the House of Commons as a Liberal MP was a difficult one, though it was a journey for which he had been prepared, he said, since around the age of eighteen, when he became convinced of the need to check the moral corruption of professional
Il4 CAT H O L I C I NT ELLECTUALS A N D T H E CHALLENGE O F D E M O C RACY
politicians. He did not intend Parliament to be a career: "My whole object was to prevent its being a career to anybody."95 Prior to being elected by slightly more than eight hundred votes in the general election of 1906 to represent South Salford, Belloc had been turned down as a candidate because of his militant Catholicism by five dif ferent constituencies. From the outset, Belloc insisted on pursuing a political career on his own terms. The Liberal caucus was informed that he would not pledge to vote on party lines but only as his constituents or his own conscience dictated. After his election the Liberal Party Cen tral Office tried to discipline Belloc's independence by refusing to help pay his parliamentary expenses, and from this juncture on he was obliged to find such support from certain wealthy friends who believed in his cause. 96 Belloc believed that Parliament rapidly was losing its legislative powers and its control of the executive to a new :financial elite who had replaced the old landed gentry. A living sym bol of these new forces was the Liberal Party's rising star, David Lloyd George. Lloyd George was a clever politician who knew how to read the mood of the electorate and how to manipulate opinion. Belloc came to detest him as the champion of the new liberalism that betrayed the radical liberal traditions with which he had so closely identified. This new style of mass politics and collectivist oriented liberalism was especially prone to the manipulation of the :financial plutocracy that Belloc saw replacing the old gentry. Belloc's decision to enter politics was motivated in large part by his belief that there was yet a chance to check such tendencies. Par liament might still serve a useful function as a forum for debate, thereby satisfying the public's need to know. In this sense the House of Commons could provide a crack in the ring of silence engineered by the financial plutocrats who monopolized the press. A member of Parliament at least had the power of criticism, and by asking embarrassing questions in Commons and by raising relevant issues in a few "independent" newspapers the conspirators might be forced into the public spotlight. Here is where Belloc thought he could make a difference. As the first English politician in modern history to stand for Catholic causes in Parliament, Belloc supported his campaign pledges to oppose the Education Act of 1902 (which withheld public aid to
The Appearance of the "Chesterbelloc" n5
sectarian schools), resist temperance reform, fight those who op posed Home Rule for Ireland, and work against the importation of Chinese labor into South Africa. Fighting such battles soon brought him into conflict with the majority of Liberal MPs. The first clash was over the Chinese labor issue. Pro-Boers and labor supporters in the Liberal Party were particularly exer cised about the importation of Chinese workers into the Transvaal gold mines, because they believed it was a ploy by the mine owners to lower the general wage scales for all miners, thereby maximiz ing corporate profits. If successful, such tactics might even be tried in Britain. In December 1925 the leader of the Liberals, Henry Campbell-Bannerman, pledged his party to work for an end to the practice. But when a new Liberal government was returned, the party leadership compromised on their commitment in such a way as to minimize the losses for those owners who had made large in vestments in the importation of Chinese workers. Belloc was greatly disappointed at the Liberals' failure to put an end to all profiteer ing in South Africa, but when he was told by the Deputy Speaker that he would be allowed to address the House only on condition that he not bring up the Chinese labor question, his indignation could not be contained. Belloc caused a great stir when he informed his South Salford constituency of the matter, but the Liberal Party officially denied the incident.97 Outraged at the duplicity of his party, Belloc ignored the order and in his maiden speech demanded that the government not only stop the practice immediately (it was the mandate of the 1906 election, he claimed) but commence to deport the Chinese workers, making the mine owners pay the cost of doing so. 98 Belloc concluded that the Liberals had reneged on their elec toral promises on the Chinese labor question because a clique of wealthy capitalists with investments in South Africa had con tributed heavily to the party's political funds. He demanded that this "secret war chest" be audited so the public would know which people were controlling the political agenda. The proposal was ignored by the House of Commons, but Belloc claimed he knew who the guilty ones were: the money came from the pockets of the "Rand magnates," Jewish financiers who were responsible for the Boer War.
u6 CAT H O L I C I NTELLECTUALS AND T H E CHALLENGE O F D E M O C RACY
Other skirmishes concerning Belloc and a variety of foreign and domestic issues ensued after the Chinese labor controversy. Belloc continued to denounce the persistent driving force that controlled events, namely, a group of self-serving plutocrats with foreign finan cial connections.99 The final episode that convinced Belloc to quit Parliament alto gether was the Liberal Party's attempt to reform the House of Lords. This effort was prompted by the Lords' failure to support the gov ernment's 1909 budget, which called for new revenues from land and income taxes, death duties, and other charges on consumer items to help pay the costs of naval construction (above all, the building of Dreadnoughts to maintain British superiority in the face of the Ger man naval build-up) . The House of Lords, the bastion of gentry privilege, rejected the budget, and the Liberals called an election in r9ro as a popular mandate for reforming the upper chamber. Belloc had been an avid supporter of Prime Minister Asquith's threat to remove the political powers of the House of Lords, hop ing that this might help revolutionize the political system by open ing it up to more voices of democracy. The Liberal Party's decision to compromise on the issue by calling a constitutional conference with the opposition indicated to Belloc that a conspiracy was in the air. When the conference failed a general election was called for December r9ro. However, by this point Belloc had decided not to stand for reelection, for he was convinced that the general election was simply a ploy to postpone the all-important issue. In Belloc's thinking, the general election was all a piece of machine politics, revealing that the so-called opposition was not really working against the government but was in a secret alliance to prevent any significant political change that might weaken the money cliques. 1 00 It was clear in Belloc's mind that the leaders of the two politi cal parties, who "controlled rather than were subjected"1 0 1 to the House of Commons, were not responding to popular mandates but rather to the wishes of the financial plutocrats. Given the fact that political reform was not even a central issue for many Tories in the ensuing campaign, Belloc was convinced that his conspiratorial views had been substantiated. Although Belloc would say that "they" had failed to bribe him heavily enough to stay in Parliament and that he was "relieved to
The Appearance of the "Chesterbelloc" n7
be quit of the dirtiest company it has ever been my misfortune to keep,"1 02 his decision to leave Commons was due to other factors as well. He resented being away from his family for extended lengths of time, he wanted to devote more time to his literary career (partly for :financial reasons-"Being in Parliament cost me indirectly I sup pose about 500 pounds a year" 1 03), and he was frankly bored with the work required to be an effective member of Parliament. The experience left a permanent sour taste in his mouth. In later years, reflecting back on this episode in his career, Belloc confided to his friend Lady Frances Phipps: I have never in my life passed years so intolerably tiresome as those during which I was in the House of Commons. I was glad to get in because it raised my income as a writer by advertising me but the surroundings are so tawdry you have to meet such a vast number of scoundrels and equal number of third-rate people daily and the trade as a whole is so impossible that I determined to be out of it as soon as I could . . . . getting out of the House of Commons and associating with decent people again is like getting into the fresh air out of the foulest stuffy room.1 04 Parliamentary politics for Belloc became either the object of cynical jokes1 05 or something to be scorned. He attacked its practi tioners in the sharpest black and white terms. There was a central purpose to Belloc's vitriolic campaigns against politicians. As he later told Hoffman Nickerson, "my object here is to arouse interest in apathetic people, whose apathy is endangering the State. I should never have succeeded in making the professional politician a byword in England if l acted otherwise."1 06
C H APT E R S
Against the Servile S tate
T
he decade before the outbreak of World War I was a time of social and political turmoil in Britain. George Danger field in his book The Strange Death ofLiberal England has argued that the intransigence of the House of Lords, the Irish issue, the excesses of the suffragettes, and the wide-scale industrial unrest had the combined effect of destroying the Liberal Party and, had it not been for those shots at Sarajevo, might well have climaxed in civil war within Britain itself. Historians have taken issue with Dangerfield's thesis, but clearly this spirit of unrest suggested per vasive disenchantment with Britain's traditional political processes. One finds in these years, among both the political left and right, persistent anti-parliamentary sentiments. Of particular concern for the ruling elite was the growing rebelliousness ofthe working classes, who seemed to be heeding the message of syndicalism, a variety of anarchist thought which arrived in Britain via the United States and France. The syndicalists emphasized the necessity of labor's utiliz ing so-called "direct action'' tactics, outside the halls of Parliament, to win control of their industries. Their ultimate objective was the creation of a new type of society regulated by the workers through their trade unions. Those responding to the call of syndicalism shared some basic con cerns which set them apart from the supporters and practitioners of conventional politics. The workers who identified with revolutionary style unionism had a deep distrust of their official leadership and the political parties. Middle-class intellectuals welcoming syndicalism were hostile to the political system because they believed it was spawning a new kind of society that would smash the individual for the sake of bureaucratic efficiency. Both these groups shared a comn8
Against the Servile State 119
mon fear of the abuse of state power in the hands of elected officials. The support for syndicalist thinking came chiefly from numerous rank-and-file trade unions, the radical independent labor newspaper, the Daily Herald, A. R. Orage's New Age, and two journals owned by Hilaire Belloc and Cecil Chesterton, the Eye- Witness and the New Witness. Cecil Chesterton, who became an early collaborator with Hilaire Belloc, had been a major figure in the Fabian Society and in Christian Socialist circles. He later converted to Catholicism, though like his brother, Gilbert Keith Chesterton, his path to Rome was a very radical one. Falling under the influence of the Reverend Conrad Noel, a fiery socialist, and Hubert Bland, who was both a Tory and a Marxist, Cecil quickly outgrew the statism of the Fabian crowd, and from 1907 to 1912 he worked closely with A. R. Orage as a major contributor to the New Age. From the outset of his jour nalistic career, Cecil seems to have developed a sour taste for par liamentary politics and, in particular, for the Labour Party, which he believed was an inappropriate vehicle for creating socialism. At the 1909 spring meeting of the Christian Socialist League, for example, Cecil defended the obstructionist political tactics of Victor Grayson, the radical independent Labour Member of Parliament for Colne Valley. He also urged Anglican socialists to keep in touch with "fer tile revolutionary activity'' and pushed for the acceptance of defiant parliamentary tactics in the face of the collapse of the Labour Party.1 Although Cecil initially opposed his brother's and Belloc's anti socialist polemics, it is clear that he shared with Belloc a ferocious dislike of the political parties. As early as February 1908, for example, Cecil applauded Belloc's speech in the House of Commons expos ing the venality of the secret party funds.2 Cecil Chesterton's arti cles during the next few years in the New Age and the Church Socialist Quarterly (the journal of the Christian Socialist League) elaborated on the evils of parliamentary politics. These essays, which were published as the book Party and People (1910 ), had a noticeable Bellocian ring to them. Party and People asserted that parliamentary government in Britain had ceased to be democratic and represen tative because the rich administered the front benches through their control of the secret party funds. The Parliamentary Labour Party
120 CATHOLIC I N T ELLECTUALS AND T H E CHALLENGE OF D E M O C RACY
was a deliberate attempt to create a political organization inde pendent of these sinister circumstances. Yet it was obvious to Cecil Chesterton, given the Parliamentary Labour Party's pusillanimous performance since the 1906 elections, that the Labour Members of Parliament had become the puppets of their own caucus, which had as its chief objective the safeguarding of Labour seats through the continuance of its alliance with the Liberal Party. Cecil found all of this disconcerting, since the socialist move ment, formalized politically through the creation of the Indepen dent Labour Party, had sought to revolutionize British society. Even the Fabian Society, which Cecil had served with considerable energy, had as its major objective the creation of a socialist state by collab orating with the Liberal Party, though the Fabians intended to "per meate" the Liberals for the sole purpose of dissolving their party. From the outset, however, Cecil had considered this a dangerous tactic, since close collaboration with Liberals could lead to co-option of socialists to the practice of conventional politics. The perform ance of the Parliamentary Labour Party had borne out Chesterton's worst fears: in 1906 it refused to protest the Liberals' backsliding on the Chinese labor question, took no stand for the workingman in the debate concerning the Licensing Bill, and generally did noth ing to force the Liberal government to increase the pace of reform. Of the forty Labour Members of Parliament returned in the 1910 elections, virtually every one sat at the sufferance of the Liberal Party. All these Members were more concerned about defending their own seats than pushing socialist causes, which meant, in effect, supporting the Liberal government on all issues of importance. Party and People also pointed out that it was important to keep the real objectives of socialism in the forefront of public debate, namely, the upholding of dignity and justice and the abolition of poverty. 3 Cecil Chesterton showed his concern about the public's misconception of socialism. It was important, he wrote, to show that socialism did not entail a growing interference in the lives of indi vidual citizens. Indeed, in anticipation of Belloc's notion of the "servile state," Cecil voiced his fear of a deadening alternative to capitalism and true socialism: "chattel slavery" through collectivism brought on by the "administrative" socialism of the Webbs. 4
Against the Servile State 121
Chesterton's book outlined some sketchy procedures to cure the disease afflicting parliamentary politics. As an antidote to the power of secret party funds, it suggested that the state could pay the salaries of Members of Parliament and underwrite the cost of elections. This procedure might give the public, not the party whips, more control over their representatives. Cecil also made vague suggestions con cerning proportional representation and calle d for the government to publish the names of those who contributed to the party funds. Yet the abject failure of the Labour Party convinced him that there was only one certain path to save Britain from the vast vistas of decay: "We must appeal to Caesar. We must raise the people against the politicians."5 Party and People seemed to suggest the need for a mass movement with sufficient unity and energy to battle the cor ruption of an enervating parliamentary system.6 Despite some differences concerning private property and social ism, Cecil Chesterton and Belloc became fast friends (Cecil even tually accepted Belloc's critique of socialism and by 19n had become a loyal Distributist) . In 19n they joined together to launch a career in muckraking journalism. The new alliance was signalized by the publication of The Party System (19n), which outlined the plutocratic conspiracy that had turned parliamentary government into a sham fight between the two major political parties. The basic theme of the book was that the wealthy contributors to the party funds controlled government without reference to the British electorate. A single coterie of "selected" Members of Parliament directed politics for these monied powers, thus making the old differences between the Tory and Liberal Parties meaningless. The plutocracy continued the party divisions in form only, in order to fool the public into believ ing that real differences still prevailed. In effect, Parliament was arbi trarily divided into two teams, each ofwhich by mutual consent took turns running the government. This was what the authors called the "party system," a fraudulent game that rendered the House of Commons null and the people of Britain impotent and voiceless in political affairs. 7 The essential function of Parliament, said Belloc, was to manipulate the executive. If that were not possible, then it should control the executive or at least check it. But Parliament had now lost power over even the least of these functions. The purpose
I22 CATHOLIC I N T E LLECTUALS A N D T H E CHALLENGE OF D E M O C RACY
of The Party System, Belloc insisted, was to plot out this failure and show it to the public "in a time when the press in general had so crystallized upon dead party lines that, save in a book, no wide pub lic could be told the precise truth."8 The Party System proposed two specific reforms. The first was a mandatory auditing of the party funds. These secret funds were used for financing the election campaigns of men selected by local party organizations. The existence of this source of money naturally raised questions as to the identity of the contributors and possible rewards that might have been expected of them for services rendered. The second reform proposal was a call to limit the duration of Parlia ment to a fixed period (four years at the very most) , during which the House could not be dissolved. The two authors hoped that this would modify the influence of the party funds, since a vote against the government would not bring the expense of a general election. The book concluded on an optimistic note. There was no need to supplant the present political system: All we have to do is make the party system impossible, and that will result when a sufficient number of men are instructed in its hypocrisies and follies and when men begin to ask for an oppor tunity to express their opinions at the polls . . . . Light on the nasty thing and an exposure of it are all that is necessary. 9
The second book upon which both the Chestertons and Belloc would construct their attack on parliamentary politics was Belloc's single most important work, The Servile State, which appeared in r9r2. Here Belloc also first articulated the alternative to socialism and capitalism called Distributism. In The Servile State Belloc prophesied that the socialists' attempts at wholesale nationalization would prove too difficult, and that there would be a compromise with capitalism, in which the owners of industry would be allowed to hold the means of production provided they accept the respon sibility of keeping their workers in a tolerable living condition. The potentially revolutionary worker would be given security-in short, be bought offby bread and circuses-and thus, for all practical pur poses, would become a slave to the capitalists and state bureaucrats.
Against the Servile State 123
This would result in a condition where the mass of men would be constrained by law to work for the profit of a minority. As the price of such constraint, the workers would be given the economic pro tection which capitalism could not provide, but the arrangement would guarantee to the ownership class a monopoly over the devices for producing wealth. The remedy to this system of slavery (the "servile state") which the Chestertons and Belloc demanded was a general redistribution of property into the hands of the widest num ber of people (in other words, Distributism, an idea derived from Rerum Novarum) in place of the present scheme in which a large pro portion of property was concentrated in the hands of a few capitalists. David Lloyd George's National Health Insurance Act (19n) was a major step toward the slave system Belloc warned against. In Bel loc's mind, this act created two categories of citizenry: employers and masters, employed and subordinates. Citizens in one group were free but had the legal responsibility of securing the material well being of their subordinates; citizens in the other were unfree and legally bound to their work but guaranteed a minimum sufficiency. The Insurance Act compelled the workers to register and pay taxes, and the employers to enforce registration and collect the taxes. Bel loc believed that the government's continued expansion of unem ployment benefits and labor exchanges facilitated the advance of the servile state, for it forced the worker, lacking ownership of the means of production, into a condition of further dependency upon his master. It is important to realize that the Chestertons' and Belloc's cri tique of Parliament and their anti-statism were not eccentricities developed outside the mainstream of political and economic think ing. On the contrary, a sizeable element within the trade union movement and those in sympathy with it were moving in similar directions.1 0 In this sense, the Chesterton brothers and Hilaire Bel loc were part of a larger outburst of anti-establishment opinion. The most visible manifestation of this opposition was a plethora of strikes and various struggles which broke out within the labor move ment in Britain prior to World War I. This protest movement not only dovetailed with but also was significantly influenced by the Chestertons' and Belloc's critique of British politics.
I24 CAT H O L I C I N T ELLECTUALS A N D T H E CHALLENGE OF D E M O C RACY II
A number of theories have been advanced to explain the working class unrest during these years. Sir George Askwith, the Govern ment's chief industrial advisor, blamed it on the failure of wages to keep up with rising costs of living, while the wealthy increased their conspicuous displays ofluxury.11 Sir Leo Money's Riches and Poverty (1905) had a great effect on the public's perception of this. Money used copious and convincing statistics to show the growth of national income and its shockingly unequal distribution. Socialists and Labour Party speakers made ample use of Money's data to bol ster their arguments for a redistribution of wealth. Money's figures showed that, despite seven years of progressive reforms and legis lation, the average working man was relatively worse off than he had been a decade before. G. D. H. Cole, the labor historian and pioneer of Guild Socialism, recognized the emergence of a new spirit of freedom in this working-class unrest. He called the mood a "new romanticism," though he later concluded that it was primarily a mass reaction against the inability either of trade union leadership or parliamentarianism to improve working-class living standards. Discontent also was fueled by the development of centralized industry-wide collective bargaining agreements, which overlooked particular local variables. On the other hand, many contemporaries believed that the unrest was directly inspired by revolutionary syn dicalist ideas.12 In recent times, labor historians have tended to minimize the role of syndicalist ideas in these events. This also was the position of the leaders of the Parliamentary Labour Party during the times of unrest, namely, Philip Snowden and James Ramsay MacDon ald.13 The official historian of the South Wales Miners, R. Page Arnot, passes over the syndicalist issue rather hurriedly and con siders its influence as transitory at best.14 The labor historian Henry Pelling argues that syndicalist propaganda received wide publicity, but he believes that contemporary observers attributed to it more responsibility for unrest than it deserves. Active syndicalists were a tiny minority, in his view, and had little influence on union
Against the Servile State 125
policy after 1912, being completely unsuccessful in their attempts to reorganize the workers along industrial lines. It is certainly true that Labour Party candidates who advocated "direct action'' tactics had no success at the polls. Even the Labour Members returned in the radicalized Welsh constituencies in the l9IO election were of the so-called "Lib-Lab" (collaborators with the Liberal Party) per suasion. Pelling also de-emphasizes the anti-parliamentarianism of the trade union movement, maintaining instead that the workers were generally apathetic about politics prior to World War I. Pelling even argues that there is little evidence to substantiate significant working-class despair with the Labour Party during these years. Although there were disagreements about policy, including a revolt of disaffected groups within the Independent Labour Party in l 9 n, the maj or labor-affiliated associations, including the British Socialist Party, were not hostile to parliamentary methods.15 However, it appears that many labor historians, by focusing on the formal institutional dimensions of organized labor, may have overlooked the informal, local, and provincial levels of working-class sentiment. R. J. Holton, in a lengthy and detailed study of British syndicalism, has demonstrated considerable anarchist influence among the trade union rank and file. Significantly, he shows that there was a large degree of community involvement in the various coal and transportation strikes, which had the effect of forcing the moderate executive leaders to assume more militant policies.16 Holton also gives evidence of wide-spread disillusionment with conventional parliamentary politics among the rank and file. In l9n, for example, three Devon men, S. Reynolds and Bob and Tom Woolley, published a revealing polemic entitled Seems SolA Working Class View of Politics. The purpose of this essay was to record the views of the "voiceless" historical participants, and the evidence sub mitted was measurably different from what the institutional labor historians have told us. Its basic message was that working class men, though committed to political party allegiances, were never theless highly suspicious of the integrity of labor politicians once they entered Parliament. Much like Victor Grayson, the authors of Seems Sol complained that Labour Members of Parliament had developed bourgeois mentalities and could no longer be trusted.17
126 CATHOLIC I NTELLECTUALS AND T H E CHALLENGE O F D E M O C RACY
Probably the strongest evidence of working-class disillusionment with parliamentary politics was the success of the revolutionary Daily Herald, which mounted a ceaseless assault on the Parliamen tary Labour Party, and the failure of the Daily Citizen, a paper launched by the official labor movement to counteract the influence of the Herald. From labor's inception as a political force, its leaders had been beset by left-wing critics whose purpose was to push the movement into more radical positions and programs. Leftist laborites gener ally chaffed against the restrictions of the parliamentary system. The founders of the Independent Labour Party (ILP), a national orga nization representing labor and socialist groups with the aim of building a socialist society, hoped to create a political party giving the working class an independent voice in Parliament. For this pur pose, the ILP sought the support of the trade unions, not only to win their votes but also in the hope of using their funds for politi cal purposes. Under the leadership of James Ramsay MacDonald and Philip Snowden, the ILP pursued a gradualist policy of reform through Parliament and urged Labour Members of Parliament to collaborate in this endeavor with the Liberal Party. MacDonald, a man more comfortable in the company of Liberals than of socialists, had a rather woolly idea about the meaning of socialism: in his words, it represented "the growth of society, not the uprising of a class."18 In order to secure Labour seats in Parliament, MacDonald and Snowden had a secret agreement with the Liberal Party not to oppose each other in districts where one or the other had a chance to win elections.19 Both men consistently denied this, and neither their colleagues within the ILP nor the rank and file ever knew about the secret pact. The Parliamentary Labour Party, of which MacDonald became chairman in l9n, had a negligible impact on the House of Commons. The Party was unable to initiate any new legislation in the interest of its labor constituency, and attempts to increase its strength in by-elections ended in complete failure. One explanation for Labour's unaggressive behavior was the more assertive policy initiated by the Liberals after 1906. In Parlia ment they assumed the role of social reformers and thereby stole Labour's thunder. After l9IO the Labourites became even more the
Against the Servile State 127
prisoners of the Liberals. The general election of 1910 returned the two major parties with nearly equal strength, and now the Labour Members of Parliament had to be careful lest they turn the Liberal government out of office. Also, in 1909 the Labour Party was struck a potentially crippling blow by the passage of the Osborne Decision, in which the House of Lords ruled that the trade unions could not use their funds for political purposes. As a result, the Parliamen tary Labour Party was bereft of funds necessary to support its Mem bers of Parliament and to fight elections. Because of the Liberal Party's difficulties over Home Rule, it took Labour Members a long while to persuade the government to mitigate the effects of the Osborne Decision. David Lloyd George tried to deal with the prob lem by instituting state payment of Members of Parliament but did so only after the Parliamentary Labour Party agreed to support his National Insurance scheme. Meanwhile, the Parliamentary Labour Party came under heavy fire from more radical elements, who felt that not enough was being done to further the cause of socialism. The militants' cause got an important boost in July 1907 when, in a by-election at Colne Valley, Victor Grayson was returned to Parliament as a self-styled "inde pendent socialist." Grayson was a vociferous critic of the Parlia mentary Labour Party's gradualist policies and asserted that the amenities of parliamentary life had divorced Labour Members of Par liament from the problems and life-styles of the workers. Although Grayson had the support of his local Independent Labour Party branch, the Labour Party had refused to back him, and, upon enter ing the House, he refused to sign the Party constitution. Grayson's contumacious conduct in Commons endeared him to labor mili tants throughout Britain, and he even managed to earn a worldwide reputation for himself "Parliamentarians," said Grayson in one of his typically colorful but vitriolic perorations, "passed measures for the good of the people only when dragged from their hands by riot and bloodshed."20 By October 1908 Grayson's antics had become so outrageous that he was removed forcibly from Parliament. At this point, A. R. Orage convinced Grayson to become political editor of the New Age. The position provided Grayson with an excellent platform to
128 CATHOLIC I N T ELLECTUALS AND T H E CHALLENGE OF D E M O C RACY
vent his anti-parliamentary diatribes, and the New Age quickly reached new records in circulation. From the New Age, Grayson moved to Robert Blatchford's Clarion, where he came to exercise complete control over the paper's policy. Grayson published his views in a book, The Problem of Parliament: A Criticism and a Remedy (1909). Urging laborites to "fight" in both Parliament and in the constituencies, Grayson called for a new type of socialist party: If the same men are chairmen at the conference, officers of the executive, directors and editors of the official paper and wire pullers of the political policy all at the same time, why not turn the whole thing into an absolute monarchy or . . . a composite Popedom inside a latter day Vatican.21 Grayson's ride to prominence suggested a serious dissatisfaction with the policy of the Labour Party. In 1908 Ben Tillett, leader of the successful 1889 London dock strike, issued an angry pamphlet entitled Is the Parliamentary Party a Failure? As part of labor's officialdom, Tillett expressed a minority opinion, though it was rep resentative of the growing frustration of the lower ranks. Develop ing a line of criticism similar to that used by Cecil Chesterton, Tillett severely denounced MacDonald, Snowden, and others as hypocritical betrayers of their class for serving the interests of what he identified as the temperance-babbling puritans of the Liberal Party. In particular, Tillett condemned the Parliamentary Labour Party's support of such "red-herrings" as the Licensing Bill, which was not in the interests of the workers, and lamented that the more important issues of unemployment and hunger were regularly ignored. A major event in the history of pre-war labor activity occurred with the return to England in 1910 of Tom Mann, who, along with Tillett, had been a leader of the 1889 London dock strike. Disap pointed with the slow progress of social revolution, Mann had emi grated to Australia, where he became active in the labor movement. Mann's experience with state-controlled industry in Australia had undermined his confidence in collectivism, and he came to recog nize that nationalization was not the means by which to bring on socialism, for it resulted "in domination by a bureaucracy, entirely in
Against the Servile State 129
the interest of the capitalist class."22 In addition, he had discovered that reformist parliamentary politicians and arbitration laws had emasculated the vigor of the Australian trade unions. While abroad, Mann had studied the writings of James Connolly, and, before returning to Britain, he traveled to Paris to learn more about French syndicalism. Mann's major concern was to warn the British workers about the dangers of state socialism and to rouse them against politi cians who were taking over the leadership of the labor movement. Mann's sojourn in Australia and his studies in Paris led him to embrace syndicalism, a doctrine that de-emphasized the efficacy of political reform and turned instead to the use of industrial action by workers to bring meaningful change. Mann became an advocate of industrial unionism, which called for the amalgamation of the multifarious trade associations into one large union that encom passed skilled and unskilled workers across trades and industry. Mann's conversion to syndicalism was extremely important for the British advocates of industrial unionism, because unlike many of the younger, brash, lesser-known rank-and-file syndicalists, Mann's prominent socialist and labor credentials meant that the labor lead ers would be obliged to give him both respect and attention. With the assistance of Guy Bowman, Mann published a series of pam phlets that outlined methods for reorganizing the trade union movement along syndicalist lines. In November 1910 a syndicalist conference was held in Manchester, attended by some two hundred delegates representing sixty thousand workers. The conference authorized the creation of the Industrialist Syndicalist Education League (ISEL), which published a monthly journal entitled The Syndicalist. The ISEL set no restrictions on membership: it included members of the Independent Labour Party, the British Socialist Party, the Fabian Society, the Church Socialist League, and anar chists of all varieties.23 Mann's basic message was that the emancipation oflabor could be effected only by the efforts of the working classes themselves, and this could be achieved chiefly by ceaseless struggle in the economic, not the political, arena. Instead of state socialism, which in reality would only ensure control of the government by the capitalists, the proletariat must seek ownership and control of the means of pro duction. In order to accomplish this, The Syndicalist insisted that all
I]O
CATHOLIC I N T ELLECTUALS A N D T H E CHALLENGE OF D E M O C RACY
workers join a union and that all the unions in a given industry unite together to achieve economic freedom. Mann initially did not reject parliamentary politics. His position was nonpolitical rather than antipolitical. Labor should use political tactics, but these were con sidered of only secondary importance, since, Mann believed, indus trial action alone made political maneuvers effective. Essentially, Mann's ideas followed the tack of the industrial unionists, though the ISEL was criticized by some syndicalist groups for its refusal to reject political action altogether.24 These criticisms ceased by the spring of l9n, since after the general election of l9IO and the grow ing labor unrest Mann became hostile to parliamentary politics. Instead, he supported what was called "direct action'': the policy of workers initiating a fighting policy (by utilizing slowdowns, boycotts, and strikes) to overthrow the capitalist system rather than conciliat ing the establishment by participating in party politics. By July 1912 Mann could announce that "political action is of no use whatsoever."25 Mann's colleague, Guy Bowman, justified this new approach by pointing out that socialism via Parliament would mean bureaucracy, not freedom, a "new tyranny imposed by some six hundred political oracles." Syndicalism sought to liberate the laborer from the clutches of the bureaucrat by teaching him the necessity of self-reliance and individual initiative. The workers, wrote Bowman in the Daily Herald, "must think of themselves as something other than articles of merchandise that are bought and sold in the market place." Syn dicalism, he explained, was but a means to an end in which the workers would realize their full humanity and need no experts to guide them, or officials to rule them.26 Henceforth The Syndicalist declared that the industrially organized workers should themselves undertake control of both industries and the government. The means to this end was to be prepared as rapidly as possible through a general strike of national proportions. 27 This outburst of syndicalist sentiment won over several signifi cant elements within the organized labor movement. Echoing Cecil Chesterton, the Socialist Labour Party concluded that Labour's poor showing in the l9IO general election was a direct result of the Independent Labour Party's parliamentary action and its futile "advocacy of reforms": reforms, it argued, led away from socialism.28 Working-class unrest after l9IO gave credence to this charge. In
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November 19!0 the Socialist Labour Party's journal, the Socialist, announced that the number of issues sold had increased by a thou sand during the year and that the Party had a substantial increase in membership. Dissidents within the Independent Labour Party also became more sympathetic to the syndicalist message. Russell Smart, for example, concluded that socialist ideals had been sidelined by "electioneering" and only industrial action would stem the drift toward collectivism controlled by "officials of the class state."29 Syn dicalist ideas were clearly making inroads into the rank and file of labor. The unpopularity of parliamentary tactics reached alarming proportions in the National Boilermakers Union in 1913, when less than six thousand ofits sixty-thousand membership voted to engage in political action. A vast majority of the Union members also op posed any kind of affili ation with the Labour Party.30 Writing in the Daily Herald on 8 January 1912, E. W. Sessions claimed that in London and Manchester alone there were fifty thousand avowed syndicalists. Syndicalism also won a wide following in the London building trades,31 among the railway men (with their own journal, Syndicalist Railwayman), and in the mining, engineering, and trans port industries. Most importantly, the impact of syndicalist think ing on Jim Larkin and his efforts to organize the Irish transport workers is plain.
The growing dissatisfaction with labor's parliamentary party, the smoldering anger against orthodox trade union leadership, and the appeal of syndicalist thinking coincided with the emergence of Cecil Chesterton's and Hilaire Belloc's critique of party politics and Fabian collectivism. Both Cecil Chesterton and Belloc, along with many within the trade union movement, had recognized serious threats to the liberties of every man in the maturation of plutocratic politics. III
The most outspoken and consistent supporter of the new spirit of working-class revolt was the unabashedly radical Daily Herald, a newspaper that also allowed the Chestertons and Belloc to make bridges into the labor world for the cause of Distributism. This
132 CATHOLIC I N T E LLECTUALS AND THE CHALLENGE O F D E M O C RACY
remarkable enterprise was launched in April 1912 as an independent forum for those devoted to revolutionary causes. George Lansbury had controlling interest; it had the backing of Ben Tillett and the financial support of the Countess De La Warr (one of the first aris tocratic labor sympathizers),32 as well as the support of syndicalists and of the leading suffragettes. Lansbury had served as a Labour Member of Parliament, but in 1912, out of disgust with the leader ship's refusal to attack the Insurance Bill, its failure to fight the Osborne Decision, and the executive's reluctance to support the vote for women, he resigned from the Party. Lansbury stood as an inde pendent in 1912 but lost the election. He did not return to West minster for another ten years. Even as Member of Parliament, Lansbury was skeptical of parliamentary politics. Writing in Cecil Chesterton's Eye- Witness in l9n, he called for the destruction of the party system through the force of public opinion. 33 Under Lansbury, the Daily Herald was opened to any writer who proclaimed himself a rebel or an enemy of the capitalist sys tem. G. K. Chesterton and Belloc were regular contributors, giving their services for little and sometimes no payment. 3 4 Although Lansbury worked hard to keep the Herald independent, and refused to follow any party line, the major syndicalist spokesmen tended to dominate its columns. Under Charles Lapworth, its editor until 1913, syndicalist propaganda was given preference over all other views. Moreover, leading syndicalists were heavily represented on the paper's management committee, all of which ensured revolutionary minded opinion in the Herald's editorial positions. Despite the blatant syndicalist proclivities of the Daily Herald, under Lansbury the paper made a concerted effort to remain open to all lines of dissident thought. Acting in this capacity, the Herald served as an important conduit for the cross-fertilization of Dis tributist, Christian Socialist, syndicalist, suffragette, and Guild So cialist ideas. Although these movements represented many varying opinions and divisions, they retained a unity of purpose when it came to the larger problems posed by state socialism and the power of capitalism. Belloc and the Chestertons, for example, were vehe mently opposed to "votes for ladies" yet at times sympathized with, and even welcomed, suffragette militancy as a tool against the sys tem. The Herald noted that the suffragettes were the first to rise
Against the Servile State 133
against the party system. Not even the labor movement could claim this, wrote its correspondent, "G.R. S.T," for though labor support ers started with a similar political creed, they had been caught up in the parliamentary machine and were mangled in its gears. But the women with their contempt for politicians had taught labor a les son: they exposed the hypocrisy of a government which claimed to be liberal but allowed halfits population to remain political serfs. In this sense the women's movement had infinitely greater influence than simply a demand for the vote: it was part of a larger movement against a sham political system that was creating a servile society, and in rebelling against this system, the suffragettes were really at the side of Hilaire Belloc. 35 Writers in the Daily Herald, despite their different political slants, generally viewed themselves as part of a family of freedom fighters giving battle to what Belloc had called "the servile state." In this sense, these contending schools of thought tended to merge together and complement one another as they assaulted the parlia mentary and trade union establishments. Although the socialists who wrote for the Herald fundamentally disagreed with the propri etary objectives of the Distributists, there was a steady movement of ideas between the Herald and Belloc's and Cecil Chesterton's papers, the Eye- Witness and the New Witness. These papers had the highest praise for one another. Belloc, for instance, regarded the Herald as the only "free" paper available to the working man not controlled by the "official" press (it sold for a halfpenny), while the New Witness (selling for sixpence) and the New Age were the only two sources of independent news for the middle classes. Though they were different in character, Belloc believed that all three papers shared a common "thirst for freedom."36 The Daily Herald and the Eye- Witness and New Witness had similar objectives in throwing their support to the plethora of strikes throughout the period from 1910 to 1914. They attacked the labor proponents of conventional party politics and waged a constant strug gle against the National Insurance Act and the Marconi scandal. Belloc's warnings about the impingement of servile legislation led the Herald to rebel against every move to increase the powers of the state. In the words of the Herald's correspondent, "no one has bet ter claim than Mr. Belloc to claim the honour of being one of the
134 CATHOLIC I N T ELLECTUALS A N D T H E CHALLENGE OF D E M O C RACY
leaders of that revolt."37 In one of its infrequent and short-lived reformist moods, the Herald picked up on the New Witness's call for proportional representation as a means for breaking the power of those who pull the wires ofParliament.38 The Herald correspon dent hoped for a drastically altered parliamentary structure in which the House of Commons (which the Herald dubbed the "House of Pretence") would be replaced by a central assembly similar to the Trades-Union Congress, representing the interests of those who work, rather than "a Parliament along Westminster's lines which only represents those who produce nothing."39 The syndicalist Leonard Hall, another regular correspondent for the Herald, reviewed The Servile State in November 1912. Although Hall could not accept its Catholic and Distributist conclusions, he agreed completely with its analysis of the prevailing political trends and declared that no bet ter critique of the capitalist system had ever been written.40 In December 1912 Cecil Chesterton wrote a provocative essay in the Daily Herald asking the question: "Is socialism dead?" The point of the article was to force socialists to reconsider the old objective of state ownership of the means of production and the notion of using the state as the main tool for the construction of a socialist society. The question triggered a series of responses by prominent dissidents, including Lansbury, Mann, Arthur Lewis, and others, most of whom concurred, in one way or another, with Cecil's anti collectivism and admitted that they no longer had complete faith in the state as a suitable agency for the achievement of socialism. A major event for the Daily Herald was G. K. Chesterton's deci sion to join the paper after he broke with the Daily News in Febru ary 1913 . Chesterton informed the Herald's readers that he thought it better to resign from the Daily News before the next great mea sure of social reform made it illegal to go out on strike (referring to the government's introduction oflabor conciliation boards, to which he was implacably opposed). Chesterton's move to the Herald was a front-page story; the importance of the event was revealed in the fact that his weekly column appeared for a time on page l, some thing the paper had never done for anyone else. The Daily Herald was clearly the single most important organ of anti-parliamentary opinion in Britain. Its campaign was bolstered
Against the Servile State 135
considerably by the establishment of the Herald League, which took the paper's message into localities and byways that never could have been reached by newspapers alone. This organization was founded mainly to raise funds at the grass-roots level in order to keep the Herald solvent, but it quickly expanded its mission, becoming a vehicle for social, political, and cultural activity. Like the columns of the Herald itself, the League was open to all schools of dissident thought, though syndicalists and their fellow travelers seemed to be in the majority. The prominent industrial unionist A. D. Lewis, for example, was national secretary of the League. League members known as "Heraldites"-addressed one another as "comrades" and "rebels." The ideal "Heraldite" was someone independent in spirit, self-reliant in personal life, and passionately devoted to social recon struction. G. K. Chesterton wrote a letter to the League saying that he was sorry that he could not attend its inaugural meeting in Lon don, but he applauded its campaign and offered his services to the cause. Belloc also spoke at League meetings. The Herald League generally became involved in the kinds of activities that the Clarion Clubs had undertaken (sponsoring social events and lectures, and doing propaganda work) and, along with the Eye- Witness's League for Clean Government, may have provided the inspiration for the New Witness League and the G. K 's Weekry-affiliated Distributist League. Probably the Herald League's most conspicuous contribu tion to revolutionary activity was its service to the Irish workers dur ing the great Dublin lockout and its subsequent sponsorship of Jim Larkin's British lecture tour. The Dairy Herald gave the critics of labor's parliamentary poli cies, those who opposed the growth of big government, and the foes of conventional trade-union practices a badly-needed forum for airing their unconventional ideas. In doing so, the Herald helped to liberate debate from the ideological constraints imposed by the Parliamentary Labour Party and the official trade-union leadership. IV
The anti-statist campaign of the working-class Daily Herald was complemented by an equally radical assault on the politics of the
13 6 CATHOLIC I N T ELLECTUALS A N D T H E CHALLENGE OF D E M O C RACY
establishment by a few independent journals that represented revo lutionary middle-class opinion. One of the most influential of these was A. R. Orage's New Age. Orage and Holbrook Jackson purchased this weekly in the sum mer of 1907. A major source of support for the venture was the Fabian Arts Group. This group consisted ofleading members of the Fabian society who resented the domination of the Webbs and their policies, which they criticized as "collectivist" and prone to an insidi ous growth in bureaucracy. This splinter group included George Bernard Shaw, H. G. Wells, Lowes Dickinson, and Eric Gill. The New Age supporters believed that the Fabian emphasis on state socialism had the potential to stifle individualism; this would result not only in plutocratic political control but would also place a dead hand on art and philosophy. Orage's and Jackson's journal was meant to provide a platform for ideas outside the scope of conventional Fabian discussion, above all for the views of such modern thinkers as Nietzsche, Ibsen, Tolstoy, and Shaw. Many of the writers who contributed to Orage's journal (by the end of 1907 he had sole own ership), though they did not share similar political views, were in revolt against what they discerned to be the decadence of contem porary British social thought. The New Age's special mission was laid out in the first issue: the editors declared that "Socialism as a means to the intensification of man is even more necessary than Social ism as a means to the abolition of economic poverty."41 Orage, for his part, had been very much influenced by Nietzsche and his inter pretation of the Dionysian myth. Dionysus was identified with ele mental energy, irrational yet democratic, which could be unleashed against institutions that had lost their vitality. It was just such a force that Orage, Shaw, and Wells hoped to attach to socialism as an clan vital, a creative power giving men the will to revitalize society. Those who wrote for the New Age also called for a hero who would rescue society from the corruption of plutocracy and collectivism. Cecil Chesterton spoke of Caesar; Lowes Dickinson talked of Plato's Guardians; Wells idealized Bushido, the chivalric code of the samu rai; Gill was passionately devoted to Nietzsche's Zarathustra; and, of course, Shaw championed the Superman. As for Orage, he wrote:
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There is no doubt that such ideas as that contained in the Samu rai, and again, as that of the Superman, bear a close relationship, if not with actual polices of today, with the near development of the saner political outlook.42 In 1908 the New Age mounted a long and sustained attack on the Labour Party and the ILP, its chief complaint being that they had failed to uphold revolutionary socialist principles. Grayson's par liamentary harlequinades were hailed as "Dionysian," for they rep resented the irrational, energized qualities that Nietzsche had extolled. It was during these early years of the New Age that Cecil Chesterton began his attacks on the Labour Party, and the paper's editorial policy tended to support his line of argument. Like Belloc and Cecil Chesterton, Orage favored the state payment of members of Parliament because it would free Labour delegates from the clutches of their party caucus. In this sense, Orage denied the legiti macy of the party system. By 1910 Orage had begun to question the relationship between the socialist movement and politics, since he had become convinced that the Labour Party was incapable of ab sorbing any new socialist ideas. Obviously what was needed, claimed the New Age, was a new " . . . personality, intensely individual" and "scornful of the usual bonds of society," a model for true anarchists
and revolutionists.43 It is not surprising that the New Age would welcome the out burst of syndicalist activity, for here was a manifestation of the Dionysian vitalism needed to recharge the socialist movement. The New Age editorial of 15 September 1910 concluded that labor's par ticipation in conventional politics was a wasteful expedient, which to date had produced nothing of value. The governing class, the paper contended, was far more afraid of the workingman's strike than his vote. Orage subsequently welcomed the policy of the gen eral strike, not just for its pragmatic value but also because of the moral and spiritual energy it would unleash. The attempts to orga nize labor politically had failed, though Orage was not surprised; he believed that the workers, being uneducated and untrained, indeed lacking a political tradition altogether, had nothing in their back grounds to prepare them for such a task. Consequently, the New Age
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considered the Osborne Decision a disguised blessing, since it would force the trade unionists to do what they knew best: combat capi talism through industrial action. Even more importantly, the Osborne ruling might free the trade unions from the leadership of the Parliamentary Labour Party, which was forcing the movement down the road to collectivism. The New Age ultimately concluded that the best approach was the dissolution of the Parliamentary Labour Party and the separation of socialists from the trade union movement altogether. The task of tending to theory should be given to middle-class intellectuals, independent of trade unions and politi cal parties, who could further the cause of socialism by drawing on their tradition of learning and engaging in propaganda on a vast scale. The trade unions, being freed from the unfamiliar burdens of political work, could turn their talents to organizing for economic purposes. 44 Although they fought the same enemies, Belloc had strong dis agreements with Orage's elitist views, especially the notion that nothing could help the workingman except the intelligence of the middle class: when Orage is "cut off from religion," said Belloc, "his stupidity is intolerable."45 Yet the New Age had the support of Dis tributists and syndicalists in its call for industrial action. Tom Mann, for example, wanted trade unionism separated from all political activity and urged the workers to develop their own self-reliance through the industrial union.46 Belloc and the Chestertons con curred. Orage, however, could not give his imprimatur to syndicalism per se, for he feared that too much trade union power could lead to a tyranny ofits own. A bridge between syndicalism and the New Age appeared in the theory of Guild Socialism. As a philosophy, Guild Socialism emerged out of the thinking of A. J. Penty, Hilaire Bel loc, Maurice Reckitt, and others, but the variety championed by the New Age was a synthesis of these ideas put together by S. G. Hob son. For a time, the Guild Socialism developed in the New Age pro vided hope and sustenance for those middle-class socialists who had lost faith in the Labour Party and the ILP. It also had strong appeal for those in the Fabian Society, where the idea was taken up by G. D. H. Cole and other young people active in the Fabian Labour
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Research Department. Guild Socialist thinking made inroads into the Christian Socialist movement as well, being particularly attrac tive to High Anglicans who were opposed to the state's intrusion into the affairs of the Church. S . G. Hobson, who articulated the variety of Guild Socialism supported by Orage, had left the Fabian Society in January of 1909, after he failed to convince its leaders to withdraw its affiliation with the Parliamentary Labour Party and to authorize the creation of an avowed Socialist Party. Central to Hobson's criticism of the Labour Party was that it could not free itself from the grip of capitalism unless it became penetrated with the spirit of revolution. By 19u he concluded that the force for change would come not from political action but only through aggressive industrial fighting. In Hobson's mind the engine-room of social and economic power lay in the workplace: Wealth is produced by the workers at the bench, in the factory, in the mine, and (since distribution is an integral part of pro duction) on the railway, in the ship, and in the carrier's van. The power is in the boiler and not in the gauge. Parliament is only the gauge and index; it has no other use.47 Hobson believed that the source of working-class servility was the system of wages imposed on labor by those who owned the means of production. Labor's dependency upon the capitalists was ensured by its transformation into a commodity that was subjected to inhumane laws of the market place. Like Belloc, whose anti collectivism had considerable influence on him, Hobson recognized that political reform and state ownership of the means of produc tion were useless unless the wage system were destroyed. All the leg islation supported by the Liberal and Labour parties-the National Insurance Act, the Eight-Hour Day, the Shops Act, and so on was based on the continuance of the wage system, which perpetu ated labor's dependency and guaranteed that economic benefits would continue to accrue to the capitalists. In addition, the expan sion of the government into economic matters brought with it larger bureaucracies which increased the state's control over the individual
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worker. The full emancipation oflabor would be possible only after the workers had absorbed every shilling of surplus value, and this necessitated the elimination of rent, profits, and interest. As a means to this end, Hobson called for the creation ofindus trial unions that could mobilize a general strike with the specific objective of winning working-class control of the means of produc tion. Under Robson's scheme, the workers would join national guilds that would have complete control over economic matters. The state, in contrast to the syndicalists' proposals, would not wither away but would simply lose its control over the economy and con centrate exclusively on political administration. Robson's vision of Guild Socialism was intended to be a solution to the antithetical demands of syndicalism and state socialism; whereas both asked for exclusive management and control over the economy and govern ment, Guild Socialism combined the extremes into a scheme of joint management.48 Guild Socialism made converts in the Fabian Society through the work of G. D. H. Cole and William Mellor, two Oxford intel lectuals who shared the anti-statism of the syndicalists and Dis tributists.49 Both were rebelling against the bureaucratization inherent in collectivism, the reformism of the Labour Party, and the slow advances of the Webbs toward socialism. Cole and his disciples sported red ties and purposely engaged in outlandish revolutionary behavior in order to shock the staid leadership of the Fabian Society. Like most other middle-class intellectuals sympathetic to syndical ist sentiment, Cole was in search of a force that would lead Britain out of the quagmire of Belloc's servile state. Part of the reason he and his colleagues took such an interest in syndicalism (and this was true of Belloc, Gill, Penty, Orage, Hobson, and others as well) was that it provided an approach to the ideals of William Morris: syn dicalism offered a form of organization that regarded the workers as "producers" and gave them the freedom to be creative with their labor. Cole's book, The World of Labour (1913), one of the best con temporary discussions of syndicalism, drew heavily on Ruskin, Morris, Belloc, and G. K. Chesterton to make its case for Guild Socialism. Unlike other British aficionados of syndicalism, who were influenced primarily by the American version,5° Cole had given
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French syndicalist theory a close study, and in his discussion of it used turns of phrase that resonated with the rhetoric of Henri Berg son and Georges Sorel. The World ofLabour, for instance, attacked Fabianism primarily because it was a creed lacking the elan vital necessary to rejuvenate society. Thus Cole welcomed the appear ance of syndicalism: he saw it as a vitalizing impulse to action, articu lating the will of the laboring man. Cole's position on the trade unions differed sharply from that of his mentors, Beatrice and Sidney Webb. In their plans, the trade unionists were not given a particularly responsible role to play. They were to be excluded from industrial decisions with respect to pro duction and given duties mainly in areas concerning employment. Cole, on the other hand, envisioned unions as the driving force not just for change but also as a means for assuring working-class con trol over its own affairs once the old system passed away. Like Hob son, Cole called for industrial unions and the abolition of the wage system, both of which would encourage more active citizenship among the laboring class. Cole's proposals differed from the New Age's version of Guild Socialism in a few crucial areas. First, in terms of implementation, he did not believe in the efficacy of the general strike. It was too disruptive and would not draw in new working class recruits. Second, Cole rejected the syndicalist proposition that industrial action alone would bring on socialism. At least until 1913 , he saw the need for some kind of political action, though he had no faith whatever in parliamentarianism. Finally, unlike the New Age, Cole was willing to give the state a larger role in the guild sys tem. He was especially concerned that the interests of the consumer be protected. Thus his scheme rejected Hobson's separation of eco nomic and political functions and gave the state co-partnership with the guilds: the state would own the means of production, but the guilds would be responsible for controlling the industrial processes.51 The advocates of Guild Socialist theories did not form a unified school of thought. Cole and the New Age had their differences, and both were opposed by the Distributist version of Guild Socialism. 52 Belloc, Penty, and the Chestertons, for example, criticized the so called "National Guildsmen'' of the New Age because of their accept ance of the factory system, their failure to insist on absolute ownership
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for the guilds, and their willingness to uphold large-scale organi zation, which would have the tendency to multiply bureaucracies. Belloc had long predicted the collapse oflarge-scale capitalist indus trialism. Hence, he saw no reason to superimpose an alternative scheme of production on an "abnormal" economic structure, which carried the seeds ofits own destruction. Most importantly, the Dis tributists objected to the large-scale organizational objectives of the NewAge version of guild socialism. In Penty's view, one insuperable obstacle stood in the path of this approach: all the guild's activities would become choked by the necessity of working through a mul tiplicity of bureaucracies. Because the average committeeman would get lost in the complexity of details, there would be a natural ten dency for power to migrate into the hands of professional bureau crats. Thus the guild movement could ultimately develop into an inverted form of the bureaucratic monster it initially set out to destroy. To guard against the evil ofbureaucracy, Penty insisted upon the utilization of small, self-governing guilds, exercising control on the local level: The units of their organization must be as small as is consonant with the function they are required to perform. And if for such purposes as those of finance and the buying of material a larger unit is found desirable, then the larger unit must consist of fed erated groups . . . . 53 Like Penty, Belloc also feared that the New Age scheme would bind workers to industrial bodies too large for them to control: "You'll have 'leaders' and 'parliamentary committees' and the rest of the rubbish."54 This would mean that the administration of the guild, though nominally subject to its members, would ultimately fall into the hands of some caucus or machine. The other two important journals of middle-class opinion that supported revolutionary syndicalism were Cecil Chesterton's and Hilaire Belloc's Eye- Witness and its successor, Cecil Chesterton's New Witness. The style of these papers and the issues they raised were very similar to those of the New Age. Indeed, when the Eye Witness was launched, it drew a number of writers and readers away
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from Orage's journal, and the New Age suffered a serious decline in circulation. The papers of Belloc and Chesterton may have given the New Age competition, but it was a friendly philosophical rivalry, and, most importantly, they considered each other as allies in the battle against a common enemy. Both the Eye- Witness and the New Witness were chiefly con cerned with exposing the secrecy surrounding the political process and laying bare the dangers involved in the encroachment of the state. They focused their energies on two main issues: the National Insurance Act and the corruption involved in the so-called Marconi affair. The Eye- Witness interpreted the National Insurance Act as the first major step towards a slave society, in that the entire work ing force in Britain would be controlled by a state bureaucracy; it also believed that the real motive of the act, like that of the Taff Vale Decision (which ruled that trade unions could be held liable for damages during a strike) and the Osborne Decision, was the destruc tion of the economic power of the trade unions.55 The National Insurance Act allowed management to deny coverage to workers discharged for misconduct, and it denied benefits to men on strike. The Eye- Witness regarded this as an irrevocable step toward the coercion of labor and as a denial of the employee's freedom. Most significantly, the act stipulated that union unemployment assistance funds could not be used for militant purposes. The Chestertons and Belloc believed that the Labour Party's support of the act was the product of parliamentary chicanery. The plutocrats of Commons had co-opted the Labour Member of Parliament: he had become part of the party system and could no longer represent working-class interests. When the trade union leadership failed to rouse their men against the act, Cecil Chesterton believed that the corruptive dis ease had permeated the labor movement as a whole. He now rec ognized the victory of a new kind of trade union official, who, along with Labour Members of Parliament, toured the country, sat in a comfortable London office hundreds of miles away from the near est workman, and conducted negotiations with capitalists whom he considered charming fellows. 56 The average worker also recognized this, and his disgust with such leadership was responsible for the outbreak of strikes afflicting Britain. The Eye- Witness argued that
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the time for "political action'' would come when the workers orga nized industrially, realized the treachery of the politician, and set out not to cooperate with him, but to smash him. The paper was very clear about what the workers could do about their predicament. In its lead article of 7 August 19n it supported Tom Mann completely and urged the workers to reject their par liamentary leadership (a thoroughly middle-class set of men divorced from the populace) and to "organize from below." Rejecting the gov ernment's scheme for conciliation and arbitration committees as a means for settling disputes (as contained in the Labour Disputes Bill), the Eye- Witness insisted that the workers must always have the right to strike rapidly and without notice. Both the Eye- Witness and later the New Witness were firm in their support of the strike as a legitimate weapon of labor and regularly condemned the govern ment's efforts to end strikes through political means. They also lent their editorial voices to the spread of industrial unionism and were sanguine about revolutionary changes arising from it. In the words of Belloc: If great masses of labour develop the power to organise from below, to insist upon corporate demands, to treat individual delegates as their servant, to mistrust labour 'representation' and develop a watchdog agency, then there will be great change in the industrial towns of England. 57 Belloc and his associates also took a more active role resisting those forces that oppressed labor. For example, Belloc was adviser to the Insurance Tax Resister's Defense Association, which helped draft pamphlets against the Insurance Act. Upon his advice, this organization championed what Belloc called the "Voluntary Prin ciple," meaning that workers should not be required to join the national insurance program. Belloc's alternative to Lloyd George's plan would have required employers to foot the entire cost ofinsur ance through tax paid directly to the state. Priority for benefits would be given to subscribers with the lowest family incomes whom he estimated to number three million-whereas only the remaining funds generated by the tax would be distributed to trade
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unions and friendly societies. There would be no compulsion in this system. In Belloc's plan the neediest would be helped first, workers would be free to choose their own insurance societies and doctors, and there would be no state official to interfere between them and their freedom. The genius of this scheme was that there would be no opportunity for capitalists to control the workers, while financ ing of the plan would come from those most able to afford it-"The million of well-to-do who were above the income tax limits."58 The Insurance Tax Resister's Defense Association wrote mem bers of the political parties and candidates for public office that it would campaign against anyone who refused to support legislation to make state insurance voluntary. The group urged employers to assist any employee who did not wish to register. In addition to pro paganda work against compulsory insurance, the association helped defend many who resisted the National Insurance Act. Their efforts appeared to have had some success in winning converts to the vol untary principle: the Daily Mail and the Globe took up the idea, and Lord Robert Cecil in speeches at Bethnal Green and Yeovil declared his conviction that compulsion should be abolished. 59 However, Belloc and his friends also were prepared to enter tain extralegal means to reach their ends. The Anti-Insurance Act Committee, for instance, was formed by George Lansbury, Belloc, and others (John Scurr of the dockers' union was president) to head a public campaign to smash the Insurance Act's poll tax by organiz ing workers to tear up their insurance cards on an agreed-upon date, whereupon they would refuse to permit any further deductions from their paychecks. The Committee reported progress in awak ening rank-and-file trade unionists to the dangers of the legislation. It appears that Belloc himself, through various unnamed contacts, even tried to convince a big London labor union to strike against the act. It was important, he insisted, that a move against the Insur ance Act be undertaken by those who were oppressed by the legis lation, for the politicians themselves would never have the courage to overturn the act, nor would they dare prosecute workers who struck against it. 60 The most objectionable part of the National Insurance Act was that it created an army of officials who descended on the laboring
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community, compelling workers to register at labor exchanges where a variety of personal information was recorded. In the words of the Anti-Insurance Act Committee, here the workers were "ticketed and docketed by officials by means of a secret code, which is as fol lows: looks; clothes; cleanliness; height; strength; sight; speech; hear ing."61 Such data then became part of a worker's private file. Upon receiving a compensation claim, the local labor exchange official consulted a worker's dossier and then sent the applicant's previous employer a form asking for comments. Not only was this an unten able intrusion into the private lives of the citizenry, it also could be a considerable weapon in the hands of employers who might "wish to crush active spirits in the ranks of organized workers."62 In a number of articles in various journals and newspapers, Bel loc was blunt in his defense of the workers' use of the strike. In the breach of collective bargaining agreements, he claimed, the strike was a morally justified expedient, a legitimate weapon in what had become an issue of class warfare. Since the circumstances surround ing the drafting of such agreements were unequal, the bargains, said Belloc, should have no binding force. 63 Most importantly, in Belloc's view, the increasing industrial turmoil reflected a shift in the consciousness of the English work ing class. The workers' hopes and aspirations of earlier times, when thrift and a commitment to labor diligently in the tasks of one's call ing had provided access into the ranks of the bourgeoisie, had dis appeared. The workers now took the condition ofindustrial society for granted, and this produced a new moral outlook: "the proletariat now think of themselves as proletariat." As Marx himself would have explained it, the recognition of a class enemy had produced a revolutionary consciousness in the English working class. They despised the system that oppressed them and now were committed to its destruction. 64 In Belloc's mind the most efficacious method for breaking the chains that bound the laboring classes was the "wildcat" strike, a work stoppage carried out spontaneously and without tangible orga nization, hitting the owner rapidly with no advance notice. The August 19n carmen and dockers' strike succeeded, Belloc noted, pre cisely because it was unanimously supported by the rank and file,
Against the Servile State 47
was unexpected, and did not involve the bureaucratic leadership of the trade unions. The whole thing, he remarked, had a "military quality about it."65 Conversely, the railway strike of 19rr failed be cause the workers relied on their leaders and bureaucratic organi zations. Instead of striking unexpectedly "as all men do in a military effort," the railway men gave advance warning, which alerted the government of the necessity to mobilize the armed forces to run the railroads. Although the government kept an even balance between labor and management during the conflict, it sympathized strongly with the capitalists, argued Belloc, and in fact would have sided with the owners if the strike had continued. The men only went back to work because their "so-called leaders" in London lied to them by announcing that the trade union had won a great victory and that the men should return to work. In fact, nothing had been won except the government's commitment to establish a Royal Com mission (with no power, and upon which no labor representatives were invited to participate) that would consider working-class griev ances. The men were thus duped, said Belloc, and doubly so, since from this time on their interests would be represented by Labour MPs who manipulated trade union officials for their own self-serving purposes. These politicians, in particular, J. Ramsay MacDonald and Philip Snowden, were not even working class in origin, but "theo retically socialists of the regular middle class type" motivated chiefly by private interests and the advancement of their own careers. They had been "captured by the Liberal machine" through the offer of salaries and the actual payment of public money. 66 Cecil Chesterton and Belloc were disappointed when the strikes were settled without a complete victory for labor. In most cases, they blamed the leadership for bamboozling the rank and file. But in the long run, the Eye- Witness, much like the New Age, concluded that something spiritual was missing in the labor movement. Conditions were so bad that the workman revolted, but it was a rebellion of the "body" and not of the "soul." The problem with British labor was that the bodily demand was not accompanied by any spiritual force. 67 The quasi-revolutionary working-class unrest brought a variety of ideas for social and political reform into public discussion. Many socialists and progressives of varying hues, for example, seized upon
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the introduction of a minimum wage as a fundamental mechanism for improving the condition of labor. This was a remedy supported by many socialists and especially pushed by the Catholic Social Guild. But from the outset the Chestertons and Belloc vehemently opposed the idea as a dangerous subterfuge, an insidious substitute for what labor really needed-ownership of the means of produc tion. 68 Belloc disagreed with the concept because he feared it could become part of a series oflegal decisions that might make the mini mum wage a national standard wage: ''compelling the capitalists to pay at least so much for a particular form of labor will involve the growth of a corresponding right to see that the labor is performed. "69 If the advocacy of a minimum wage were championed by those desiring to destroy capitalism, then Belloc could support it as a first step toward that end. But since he was convinced it was being for warded by those hoping to save the present economic system by stanching labor unrest, he would have no part of the package. The minimum wage in the end would produce "compulsory labor," since disputes between workers and management would be turned over to the newly created arbitration courts which, declared Belloc, were managed by the government to support the owners of capital.70 Belloc's brief career in Parliament had caused him to despair of reforming England's political traditions from within. Eventually, after the years oflabor unrest, he concluded that the parliamentary system itself, as currently constructed, was unsuited to provide gov ernance for Britain. There were several signs of its structural fail ures. The most obvious was that the basic demands of the wage earners ("the great mass of the English people," as Belloc said) were being expressed not in Parliament but rather out on the streets. Another indicator of parliamentary dysfunction was that the good and talented men who wished to serve the commonwealth no longer believed this could be done by entering the House of Commons (after all, was not Belloc's own parliamentary career proof of this?). And finally, Belloc argued, the man on the street simply had lost interest in what was said and done in Parliament. The "spirit of rep resentative government" had disappeared in the land. Any intelli gent MP recognized this and, for this reason, no longer regarded the public political constituency as his master. He now marched to the
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commands of the real power brokers, the money clique who con trolled the party funds. Prior to 1914 Belloc had hopes that the political system could be reformed through a combination of spotlight journalism, a public auditing of the party funds, payment of members, and proportional representation for the second chamber. This last idea, Belloc be lieved, would allow minority representation and give voice to a cross-section of opinion heretofore denied political expression. The caucus system potentially might manipulate members of the second chamber just as it did the current party representatives in the House of Commons, but at least it would be more difficult, especially over larger constituencies.71 Belloc also was prepared to support state payment of MPs. As a matter of principle this would further the democratic process and perhaps even hasten the breakup of the party system by allowing dissidents easier access to Parliament.72 Cecil Chesterton, for his part, seemed to think that change could best come through militant parliamentary action.73 In the summer of 1912, for instance, Cecil Chesterton urged labor to develop tactics similar to those of Charles Stewart Parnell's parliamentary party and the Irish Land League. Parnell's colleagues coordinated obstruc tionist tactics within Parliament while simultaneously directing the essentially revolutionary action oflrish peasants from without. Par nell won the admiration of the Irish people through his aggressive parliamentary policy; simultaneously, by means of the Land League's militancy, he had made government impossible and encouraged revolution. The Eye- Witness suggested that labor needed a similar two-pronged approach: a group in Commons to fight the machine and, simultaneously, an industrial army of labor animated by the same spirit that moved the Land League.74 Unfortunately, such a bold program required another Parnell, or, as Cecil Chesterton once suggested, a Caesar. By early 1914 Belloc had come to the conclusion that the reforms he and the Eye- Witness and the New Witness had earlier supported could only temporarily slow down the decay, at best. An honest auditing of the party funds would be difficult since the caucus would control the procedure; proportional representation might help in the short run, but only if it were coupled by payment of election
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expenses through public funds.75 Yet all these proposals were mere mechanical tinkerings with a system beyond the hope of repair. Par liamentary representative governments were now everywhere under attack for the evil consequences of what they produced in each country that accepted the form: "the obedience of parliamentary puppets to financial masters, the welter of petty personal intrigue, the mediocrity of those who achieved power by such intrigue, the unreality of the subjects proposed for debate, and the sham of 'oppo sition."'76 Belloc looked outside England to France, whose revolu tionary experiences had popularized the so-called "representative" theory, as the barometer of international political change. When parliamentary government is no longer tolerated in France, said Bel loc, the forces of its appeal will be broken everywhere. Moreover, in his view the collapse in France had begun. By 1914 there was only one other alternative for saving the rem nants of a bankrupt parliamentary form of government that Belloc was willing to consider: an addition to Parliament of another type of constituency based not on geographical representation but on vocational groupings along the lines of the medieval guilds. This was a political program that French and Austrian Catholic corporativists had been recommending ever since the closing decades of the nine teenth century. Parliamentary representation from its inception was based on the assumption that the locality was the true unit of the state. But the importance of geographic locality had been super seded by the varying economic interests of the times, in which a man's identity was bound up with his employment. Men sitting for special interests of the vocational kind, representing real-life activ ities with which they were attached, could revivify English politics: "You would have many speaking at Westminster for the wage earners of the iron, the cotton, the mining, the shipping industries . . . others far less numerous speaking for the interests of capital . . . others for the special interests of the various professions . . . [others for] landowners; others for the peasantry and so forth."77 Ultimately, the issue that pushed the journalism of Cecil Chesterton and Belloc to the radical fringes during these interwar years was the infamous Marconi scandal. Cecil took the lead in directing his paper's attacks on the ministers involved, beginning in
Against the Servile State 15 1
August 1912, and his extremist behavior eventually led to his trial and conviction for libel. The Marconi affair, discussed in more detail in chapter 8, indicated that high-ranking government officials were taking kickbacks in the awarding of state contracts. The front benches of both parties clearly soft-pedaled the issue, and those involved not only failed to be reprimanded but were advanced to the highest offices in the land. For the Eye- Witness and the New Wit ness, the financial and political dealings in the Marconi case were final proof of the venal and plutocratic character of British govern ment and conclusive evidence of the workings of the wicked party system. The New Age and the Daily Herald, which covered the episode in great detail, completely supported Chesterton's position throughout the affair and also drew upon the Marconi case as clear proof of the cancerous effects of the party system. Although Belloc and Cecil Chesterton launched the Eye- Witness as a joint partnership, editorial responsibility was mainly Belloc's. In June 1912, Belloc publicly stated that he needed a respite from the rigors of this task and resigned as editor, selling his shares in the paper to Cecil Chesterton. Belloc indeed may have been tiring of the demands of managing a newspaper, but there were other reasons for his formal departure from the Eye- Witness. It appears that Bel loc found Cecil Chesterton's journalistic style a bit too strong even for his own feisty tastes. The Eye- Witness experienced financial difficulties by the autumn of 1912 (the Chestertons and Belloc refused to rely on advertising because it might compromise their independence-thus their papers depended on private backers) and folded by November. However, Cecil was able to put together enough money from his father to reacquire the paper under the title of the New Witness. Belloc contributed financially to the enterprise and wrote for the paper on a regular basis, since he shared Cecil's views for the most part. But the New Witness under Cecil's editorship became more extremist in its political muckraking, assuming a style much more shrill and monomaniacal than that of the Eye- Witness. The paper's campaigns were also marred by a crude anti-Semitism that frequented its pages. Belloc was constantly obliged to defend Cecil's behavior to friends and financial backers. He privately admit ted that he did not approve of everything that appeared in the paper
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and was concerned that the public might think that he was respon sible for its contents. As Belloc told E. S. P. Haynes, a close confidant and financial backer of the New Witness, Cecil "shares many of my ideas, but not all of them. But that is a very different thing from edi torial responsibility."78 The early Eye- Witness was also scrappy and abrasive in its at tempts to expose corruption, but unlike Cecil's paper, it was rea sonably well-informed about its subject matter because Belloc had personal contacts who apprised him of the inside business of gov ernment. The New Witness lacked such inside information, and, because of insufficient money to pay investigators, the alleged facts it publicized were not always properly verified. All of this, in con junction with Cecil's proclivity for indulging in ad hominem attacks, gave Belloc cause for alarm. This kind of policy brought Cecil and his paper national attention when he helped expose the Marconi scandal, but Cecil's reckless allegations led to his conviction for libel. However, the New Witness's exposure of those involved in the Marconi affair proved to be a watershed in the history of Chester bellocian journalism. The paper's successors, G. K 's Weekly and the Weekly Review, cited the scandal as conclusive evidence of the evil machinations of the party system. G. K. Chesterton regarded the event as a turning point in his own career, indeed, a turning point for English politics in general, and it proved to be a factor in the hardening of his political attitudes: "It was during the agitations upon that affair that the ordinary English citizen lost his invincible ignorance; or in ordinary language, his innocence. 79 Various dissident movements and radical journalists were react ing against the growing power of the British state and its policies prior to World War I. Although the syndicalists, Guild Socialists, and the Distributists had considerable philosophical disagreements, they were nevertheless conscious of being part of a common effort to resist the onslaught of a society engineered by adherents of state socialism. Rather than emphasizing the differences, which are obvi ous, it is important to keep in mind what these disparate groups had in common. A major concern of the syndicalists and the revolu tionary press was to stop the drift toward collectivism and, at the
Against the Servile State 153
same time, begin building a new, more democratic society that would guarantee freedom to the individual. To accomplish this, the rot in Parliament had to be excised. This required both the elimi nation of the sham system of party politics and a restructuring of the political order. A means to this end was the construction of a new style of labor organization in the form of industrial unionism. All these movements supported in some fashion the concept of industrial unionism. For most it was a mechanism for unleashing the vital spiritual forces that society needed for its proper rejuvena tion. It also was an approach to a more balanced political system that would avoid placing excess power in the hands of the state and, at the same time, would mitigate bureaucratism. Equally important, industrial unionism was recognized as a way of making the indi vidual worker more productive and independent in order that he might reach his full development as a human being. (There was little discussion of female workers among these groups.) Although the dissidents saw different ways in which to bring about a better social order (socialism, Distributism, and so on), their goals were essentially the same: a social and political organization responsible to the needs of the individual. For example, Guy Bow man's explanation of syndicalism-a means to an end in which the workers would be self-governing and self-reliant, and realize their full humanity without the assistance of experts or officials-would have been recognized by any of G. K. Chesterton's followers as the major plank of the Distributist League. Cecil Chesterton in his socialist phase defined the goals of socialism in essentially the same way as those of Distributism: the maintenance of dignity and jus tice and the abolition of poverty. The dissidents also agreed about the obstacles that stood in the way of creating this better society: a Parliament controlled by a capitalist plutocracy; a labor leadership that had been compromised by the lure of respectability and money; the "administrative" socialism of the Fabian school; and the use of the state as the organ of socialism. In some ways, the coming together of Cecil Chesterton, the revolutionary socialist, and Hilaire Belloc, the nineteenth-century Radical, was symbolic of the commonality of sentiment that prevailed among all these anti-statists. The part nership also pointed up a looming crisis in the European socialist
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movement which the question of state sovereignty had raised. The debate over the role of the state caused a serious rift in socialist ranks which, even to this day, has not been resolved. In many crucial ways, the writings of Cecil Chesterton and Hilaire Belloc served as an arsenal from which the other anti-statists drew their weapons. This can be seen by the large number of anti parliamentarian critics who made reference to their ideas and freely borrowed the vocabulary of The Servile State and The Party System. For example, one of the more influential of the syndicalist publica tions among socialists and radical trade unionists, the organ of the Industrial Democracy League called Solidarity, made frequent ref erence to the servile-state debate raised by the Eye- Witness and the Daily Herald. Solidarity was an outspoken advocate of union amal gamation, and in its first issue it warned that labor had to fight not only private capitalism but also the extension of the state into the activity of organized labor through such insidious devices as national labor exchanges, compulsory arbitration, and the National Insur ance Act. Writing a series of articles in Solidarity on the danger of state encroachment into working-class life, Jack Wills, leader of the building-trades amalgamation movement, quoted extensively from Belloc and warned that schemes for labor exchanges were not going to benefit the workers at all but would rather "supply the master class with a regular supply of sober, efficient, and docile wage slaves. "80 This, of course, was exactly the criticism oflabor exchanges and con ciliation boards that appeared in the Eye- Witness. The views developed in The Servile State and The Party System formed a paradigm which nearly all anti-collectivist thinkers felt compelled to address. These seminal ideas germinated in the columns of the New Age, ensuring that this journal and the journals of Cecil Chesterton and Belloc would always share a certain ideological parentage. But it was in the Eye- Witness and the New Witness that the anti-statist theories of the Chestertons and Belloc were refined and reached maturity, as these three men tried to explain the omi nous forces bringing on what we today recognize as the modern state.
C H A PT E R 6
Distributism and British Politics
T
he Distributist vision of G. K. Chesterton and Hilaire Belloc is difficult to define, in part because it was never spelled out definitively in any single piece ofwriting. It was more than simply an economic theory: rather, it can best be seen as an approach to life itself, a middle road or "third way" between the inequities of monopoly capitalism and statist collectivism, the most extreme form being communism. A significant dimension to Dis tributism was the centrality ofits moral underpinnings. In fact, this is what separates Distributism from conventional economic theory. Whereas modern economic thinking assumes that the study of economy is an autonomous science, classical economic theory as well as Scholasticism-legacies out of which Distributism emerged view economics as a subdivision of moral philosophy.1 Distributism emphasized the importance of widely distributed private propri etorship and a restoration of worker control in commerce, agricul ture, and industry along the lines of medieval guilds. The ideal was inspired by Rerum Novarum, yet Distributism went beyond what was adumbrated in this encyclical. Ultimately it articulated a system of practical economics and social planning that was far more com plete than anything else produced in Catholic circles. As such, it was arguably the single most influential Catholic sociopolitical move ment in the English-speaking world, serving both as an inspiration and a model for a large variety of economic and social programs. The Distributist ideal was a balanced or mixed economy of independent farmers and small industries owned and operated by those who toiled. Political power in the Distributist state was to be 155
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decentralized, resembling a New England town hall democracy and offering the maximum opportunity for full participation of each citi zen at the local level. At the core of Distributist values were a genu ine love and admiration for common, ordinary people. Here was the ultimate creative source of civilization, and, in Chesterton's mind, it was imperative that the "common man'' remain free to fulfill his or her religious and social needs in the confined sanctity of family and home. Distributism as it developed in Chesterton's and Belloc's day stood in opposition to the ideas forwarded by George Bernard Shaw and his fellow Fabian imperialists, who had the expansionist's pen chant for metaphors of great growing and groping things, like trees. In contrast, as Chesterton put it, I believe in the flower and the fruit; and the flower is often small. The fruit is final and in that sense finite; it has a form and therefore a limit. There has been stamped upon it an image, which is the crown and consummation of an aim; and the medieval mystics used the same metaphor and called it Fruition. And as applied to man, it means this; that man has been made more sacred than any superman or supermonkey; that his very limi tations have already become holy and like a home; because of that sunken chamber in the rocks, where God became very small. 2 Distributist ideas reached their maturity in the pages of the suc cessor to the Eye- Witness and the New Witness, a journal known as G.K s Weekly. Gilbert Keith Chesterton assumed the responsibility for carrying on Cecil's journalism when his younger brother was kille d in World War I. G.K s Weekly was inaugurated in March 1925, with the avowed aim of continuing Cecil's and Belloc's battle against the prevailing social and political system by championing the prin ciples of Distributism. Although the journal stood for Catholic ideas, it was not strictly speaking a Catholic paper.3 G.K s Weekly, however, wore its Catho lic biases with militant pride, and from the outset Chesterton said that his paper would "fight every week for Catholic ethics and eco nomics" in the same manner that the New Statesman was fighting for socialist positions.4 Chesterton's approach to j ournalism was partly a response to the reluctance of the English Catholic hierarchy
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to engage in religious and political controversy. Indeed, many Dis tributists, such as Arnold Lunn and Eric Gill , frequently criticized Catholics for their intellectual timidity and for being out of touch with the problems of industrial society. Gill was perhaps the angri est of the Distributists on this score, since the clergy gave his own famous experiments in Catholic communal work and living at Ditch ling little support, and on a number of occasions he lashed out at the hierarchy for lacking the courage to apply the principles of Pope Leo XIII's social encyclicals to the life of their times. For the most part the Catholic clergy in Britain (and the United States) either ignored or misunderstood papal social teachings. The publication of Rerum Novarum, for example, was greeted by a vari ety of conflicting interpretations. One Catholic writer argued that it indicated Pope Leo's rejection of social democracy, while another viewed it as a justification of Fabian collectivism. 5 But generally, English Catholics paid little attention to the encyclical: it was not even mentioned in the Catholic Truth Society's official short his tory of the Catholic Church (1895), nor was there any reference to it in Purcell's biography of Manning (1895) or in Snead-Cox's life of Vaughan (1910) . Since Catholics knew little or nothing of the con tent of the papal encyclicals on social issues, they tended to oppose trade unionism as much as they did socialism and communism. This greatly vexed Gill, who explained that when it came to discussing matters of human work and the responsibility of workingmen, ordi nary parish priests and laymen were either not interested (owing to their ignorance of the encyclicals) or frankly antagonistic to any reform whatsoever. In the first years of Chesterton's paper a number of early con verts to Distributism played a major role in helping shape the Dis tributist sociopolitical ideal. Among these was A. J. Penty, the man credited with first introducing guild socialism to England. Penty traced the root of modern economic instability to the growth of big business and the use of machines in the economies of large-scale production. The problem started, said Penty, with the disappearance of the medieval guilds, which under Church direction had regulated prices and restrained the unlimited growth of economic individual ism. Penty asserted that the guilds were guarantors of economic sta bility through their regulation of currency and craft production. 6
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In The Restoration ofthe Gild System (1906),7 Penty called for a return to the standards of medieval craftsmanship and to the guild traditions of self-regulation and self-government in the various oc cupations. The book charged that the breakdown of the early guild system had permanently weakened the socioeconomic framework of the state by liberating the rapacious and egocentric side of human behavior. The medieval guilds had succeeded as agencies of social control only by establishing strict discipline over their individual members. As the guilds lost their power, profit became the object of all social action. The inevitable result, argued Penty, was the ap pearance of a godless, soul-destroying machine age. Penty had a romanticized notion of the healing power of medieval values. He was convinced that alienation of the worker caused by capitalism's bifurcation of the laboring process (the separation of thought from hand work) could be ameliorated by the reestablishment of medieval type guilds. The result would be a new pride in workmanship and better quality of production; as Penty put it, this would mark an advance toward social reconstruction from the point of view of qualities rather than quantities, of personality and aesthetics rather than external material conditions. Penty gravitated to Chesterton's Distributism because it pro claimed the paramountcy of religion in economics. Unless the indi vidual were willing to acknowledge and serve some higher principle than that dictated by sensuous appetite, wrote Penty, there could be for him no hope of social or economic salvation. 8 Another major figure in Distributist circles was Maurice Reckitt, a leader of the Christian Socialist Movement who helped run G.K s Weekly. Although Reckitt remained an Anglican, he claimed that Chesterton both provided him a sense of social direction and gave him the capacity to relate faith to the realities of everyday living.9 Reckitt was a key link between Distributism and the Anglo-Catholic wing of the Church of England, a major source of support for Chesterton's and Belloc's social and political ideas.1 0 Perhaps the most colorful and eccentric of the early Distrib utists, yet also the most influential in many ways, were Father Vin cent McNabb and Eric Gill. Gill was an innovative engraver and sculpturer whose radical social and aesthetic views, as well as the craft guild he established at Ditchling Common, helped Distrib-
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utism gain an international audience. After converting to Catholi cism in 1912 ( having prepared the way by reading Chesterton's Orthodoxy), Gill developed a Thomistic critique of the factory sys tem that emphasized its destructiveness ofintellectual creativity and the spiritual and aesthetic qualities of life: it makes good mechanics, good machine menders, but men and women who in every other respect are morons, cretins, for whom crossword puzzles, football games, watered beer, sham half timbered bungalows and shimmering film stars are the highest form of amusement. 11 Like Chesterton, Belloc, and Penty, Gill proposed that modern men and women return to the higher spiritual values of Christianity, best expressed in the hierarchical guild society of medieval times.12 The spiritual force behind Gill's experiment in Distributist com munal living at Ditchling Common was Father Vincent McNabb. Father Vincent was one of the best-known Catholic personalities in Britain, an indefatigable campaigner for Distributist causes, and the single most important influence behind the many Catholic back-to the-land movements of the interwar years. He described himself as "a bit of old England walking about."13 Father Vincent preferred to don the Dominican white habit and black cappa in public, giving him the appearance of a character out of a Zoe Oldenbourg novel. He was the most unabashedly radical of all the Distributists, always insisting that his close friends Gilbert Keith Chesterton and Hilaire Belloc were too meek in their criticisms of modern society. McNabb believed that only a wholesale return to self-sufficient agriculture could provide the social and economic sustenance for a true Chris tian life. Like the philosophies of Gill and G. K. Chesterton, McNabb's social philosophy as it emerged out of his experiences at Ditchling had an anarchistic flavor. A cardinal feature of his teach ing was a hostility to "the big thing."14 He was at his most indignant when attacking social and political reformers who championed the nation over the family, the city over the village, and central planning over parental authority. Father Vincent urged his countrymen to turn their backs on industrialism and the sins of the metropolis and return to the land:
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There is no hope for England's salvation except on the land. But it must be the land cultivated on a land basis and not on an industrial basis. Nothing but religion will solve the land ques tion. And nothing but a religious order seeking not wealth but God will pioneer the movement from town to land. 0 that I could make religious men and women see what I see. 15
G.K s Weekly was the vehicle for articulating the Distributist idea, but from the beginning it appears that the enterprise was not well managed. Belloc commented to a friend that the paper is "hardly edited at all" and that things were so chaotic that when he visited the editorial offices he wanted to grab "a strap or whatever else comes handy" to get people into line.16 The paper might have collapsed in 1926 had not the Distributist League been established with the purpose of keeping the venture alive. The main group of the League was called the Central Branch and met at the Devereux, a tavern near Fleet Street. Other branches soon were set up through out Britain, eventually spreading to Australia, South Africa, and Canada. G.K s Weekly served as the unifying element by keeping all the Distributist groups in contact with one another. The League recruited a sizable body of supporters to promote the paper, and with a change in management the weekly became a successful oper ation, though Chesterton's refusal to depend on advertising revenue meant chronic money problems.17 After the rescue effort in 1926 Edward Macdonald became the "unnamed acting editor," and he relied heavily on the service of his brother, Gregory Macdonald, who was contributing editor from 1926 to 1928. This arrangement continued until Chesterton's death in 1936.18 The fact that Chesterton's prose and commentaries graced the paper meant that G.K s Weekly would be well known throughout Britain. From the beginning it also was embellished with articles from the old crowd that had written for the Chestertons' and Bel loc's earlier papers, men such as George Bernard Shaw, H. G. Wells, Compton Mackenzie, Maurice Reckitt, Walter De la Mare, Mau rice Baring, and others. Yet maintaining high circulation was a prob lem, owing in part, it appears, to resistance in high quarters of the journalistic establishment. Brocard Sewell, a Distributist stalwart
Distributism and British Politics
who worked for the paper as a young man and was given charge of organizing weekly meetings at the Central Branch of the League, claimed that big news agents like W. H. Smith refused to handle G.K s Weekly because of its strong stand against big business.19 The Catholic journalist J. B . Morton said that his employer, Lord Beaverbrook, forbad writers from ever mentioning in print Chester ton's or Belloc's papers. Morton, however, quoted extensively from G.K s Weekly by using the oblique formula that his information came from "the best paper in Fleet Street."20 In the spirit ofits predecessors, G.K s Weekly defended the indi vidual against the encroachment of big government and big busi ness. This threat was posed by socialism and monopoly capitalism, both of which created the conditions for the emergence of a servile state. This struggle for the "small men'' (the independently em ployed shopkeepers, small businessmen, farmers, and the indus trial proletariat) took many forms and turns. Each issue of G.K s Weekly, for example, told of the latest business mergers and the means by which the trusts were buying up and cornering markets, thereby eliminating free competition. The affairs of particular monopoly capitalists, such as Alfred Mond, Lord Ashfield, and the Berry brothers, were regularly featured as illustrations of corruption and political chicanery. The weekly did more than write about such dealings. One espe cially colorful episode in the battle against the twin evils of collec tivism and monopoly capitalism concerned the Distributist efforts to defeat Lord Ashfield's drive to control the London transporta tion system. Distributists by the droves came out to defend inde pendent bus owners (most of whom were war veterans who had used government loans to launch themselves in business) as they waged a furious battle for survival against the buses of Ashfield's London General Omnibus Transportation Company. The so-called "London Omnibus War" of spring 1926 was a losing cause, however, for in the end the city's competitive but chaotic transportation business re quired some kind of central management. However, the problem was settled in the best financial interests of Lord Ashfield, so G.K s Weekly claimed, for his company, the Bank of England, and the Transport and General Workers' Union pooled their resources to
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secure a government transportation monopoly for London. This was all done against the wishes of popular opinion, as shown by the fact that more than a million London passengers had signed a petition in favor of keeping the private bus companies in business. Chester ton saw the spunky efforts of the independent busmen (in their dis tinctively painted vehicles brandishing special names indicating the owner's history and outlook on life, such as the "Vanguard," "Pro Bono Publico," and so forth) as a clear sign that Englishmen desired independent proprietorship versus monopoly. He hoped that the plight of the independents would serve as a catalyst for the public's dormant Distributist instincts: the colorful London traffic "pirates" could be "a beacon for guidance to Distributism."21 G. K. s Weekly asked its readers to boycott the monopoly's transportation services. Lord Ashfield, who was a business associate ofAlfred Mond's in the chemical industry and a partner in the film business with Lord Beaverbrook, the newspaper magnate, was depicted as an ''Ameri can exploiter of the worst type," a transportation leviathan crushing the freedoms of London's street travelers. G. K. s Weekly was quick to point out that the great monopolists were foreigners: Ashfield hailed from Detroit, Beaverbrook from Canada, and Mond from Palestine. In matters of domestic politics, Chesterton's weekly followed a moderate course between 1925 and 1928, voicing concern about improving conditions for the working class through trade unionism and reforming economic and social life via Parliament. It seems that while Henry Slesser served as a Labour MP, Chesterton and the Distributists were willing to endorse the Labour Party. Slesser was a highly respected legal mind who embraced Distributism (and later converted to Catholicism) and became a correspondent for G. K. s Weekly. He insisted that his party was the only group in Parliament combating plutocracy and the so-called amelioration of the poor by means that further degraded them. He and Chesterton hoped that the Labourites could be prevailed upon to accept the Distributist guild idea, with its emphasis on private proprietorship. In the issue of IO October 1926, Chesterton wrote that he could accept Slesser's analysis of the Labour Party (Slesser argued that the Party's resis tance to capitalism was rooted in medieval Catholic principles and that it therefore would oppose legislation which impinged upon the
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dignity of the individual) and that something constructive might be accomplished through parliamentary action. As Chesterton pointed out to his readers, there was no reason why Distributists should sur render Parliament completely to the plutocrats.22 While backing Slesser's efforts to move the Labour Party toward Distributist principles, G.K s Weekly also campaigned hard against what it believed were the government's efforts to undermine the growing political strength of the trade union movement. The test of its commitment came in the spring of 1926 with the outbreak of a general strike. This unprecedented, seemingly revolutionary trade union re sponse to capitalism was precipitated by years of trouble in Britain's coal industry. Profits dropped steadily after World War I with the recovery of mining in Germany and Poland. These mines were more efficient than Britain's, and with declining profits, British manage ment pushed for longer working hours and a reduction in wages, both of which were bitterly opposed by the miners. Government arbitration failed to resolve the differences, and in April the Trade Unions Congress (TUC) formulated plans for a general strike in support of the miners. G.K s Weekly supported the miners throughout the months of negotiations that preceded the strike. But Chesterton and the Dis tributists strongly disapproved of a key trade union bargaining de mand, namely, its insistence on a minimum or living wage. Focusing on the issue of wages, they argued would only serve to perpetuate the division ofproperty between employer and employee. Wage bar gaining rested on the premise that labor was a commodity, and by engaging in such discussions the trade unions simply perpetuated the worker's alienation from the products of his labor and his de pendency on a dominating class. Wages were part of the "bread and circuses" of the servile state, designed in large part to diffuse labor's demands for the more important goal of ownership of the means of production. On the other hand, Chesterton saw virtue in the mine owners' offer to gear wages to the prosperity of the mines. This appeared to be an opening for eventual joint business partnership, where remuneration for services would be linked to the industry's profits. The miners were advised to accept the partnership offer
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along with its logical corollaries: j oint cooperation and co-equal power with management in control of the industry and partnership in profits. 23 In the long run, the workers must go beyond profit-sharing and cooperative production: what they needed, wrote G.K s Weeklys cor respondent B. D. Acland, is part-ownership in the company. A key note of Distributist industrial policy must be "the utilization of the joint-stock principle of industrial organization for the multiplica tion of partners." In other words, the present system of capitalism must be smashed so there could be more capitalists.24 G.K s Weekly offered the workers its unqualified support when the general strike broke out in April 1926. Following the radical tra ditions of its predecessors, the Eye- Witness and New Witness, the paper asserted that any workman had a right to strike at any time and for any reason. Withholding such rights represented a denial of liberty.25 The paper's strong support for the strike-a special edition of G.K s Weekly was published during the affair-brought consider able criticism from many lay and clerical Catholics. For weeks the editors received letters from Catholics who considered the strike a revolutionary act. 26 Both the Anglican and Roman Catholic hier archies condemned the strike in the strongest language. Cardinal Bourne, head of the English Catholic Church, scolded the miners in his Sunday sermon at Westminster and found no moral justifi cation for their behavior: "It is a direct challenge to lawfully con stituted authority and inflicts, without adequate reason, immense discomfort and injury to millions of our fellow-countrymen. It is, therefore, a sin against the obedience which we owe to God . . . . "27 Britain's most influential Catholic monthly, the Tablet, echoed Bourne's position. It argued that the trade unions were becoming too powerful and that the action was nothing more than a ploy to hold the public ransom for winning "sectional privileges from the People's Government."28 In the eyes of many Distributists, the Catholic Church's official reaction to the strike was yet another example of a congenital reluc tance to commit itself to political action, a policy driven by the fear of invoking criticism from the governing establishment. Yet there were some associated with G.K s Weekly who were convinced that
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the paper's position in support of the strikers had gone too far, and was largely the product of a radical, communist-leaning clique within the editorial offices. Although this political disagreement was masked from the public at the time, in retrospect it appears to mark the beginning of a significant split within the G.K s Weekly circle that would become more apparent during the controversies sur rounding Mussolini and fascism in the 1930s. In its special strike edition of 15 May 1926, G.K s Weekly asserted that the industrial combines had goaded the workers into calling for a general strike in order to smash the trade union movement. It also argued that government (thanks to the machinations of Winston Churchill, Lord Birkenhead, and William Joynson-Hicks) with the unofficial support of the British Fascisti had worked to create the impression that the trade unions were under the control of Bol sheviks: "The middle and upper classes have been mobilized in defence of the Combines and the rich, and in defiance of the Trade Unions and the poor. The nominal enemy was Moscow and the Red Flag; the real enemy was the Trade Union." G.K s Weekly viewed the general strike not as an act of revolution but rather as a "reasonable defence against plutocracy."29 Gregory Macdonald, whose brother became the unnamed editor of G. K s Weekly after the League was formed in 1926 and who has provided valuable "eye-witness" accounts of life behind the scenes at the paper, downplayed the political radicalism of Chesterton's journal. 30 Macdonald emphasized that Chesterton was abroad at the time of the general strike and that the paper's editorial position in support of the workers was shaped by William Titterton (then serv ing as executive editor) , a man, in Macdonald's view, of generous political philosophy but superficial knowledge of social principles. The impressionable Titterton, said Macdonald, was counseled by Cecil Chesterton's widow, an experienced Fleet Street journalist with the paper, who was "an admirer of Soviet Russia."31 In other words, in Chesterton's absence, a certain unrepresentative element "troublemakers" in Macdonald's words-pulled G.K s Weekly to the left in support of the TUC's decision to call a general strike.32 Gregory Macdonald was adamantly opposed to this position, and, over the years, he became highly suspicious of certain people in Distributist circles who in his opinion were too sympathetic to
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the political left. 33 During the general strike G.K s Weekly under took some ill-considered, emotional positions, Macdonald believed, which did not represent Chesterton's true feelings about the prob lem; and when Chesterton returned from his trip abroad, Mac donald insisted, he articulated a more moderate assessment of the situation, which, in the long run, brought the paper into line with the official Church hierarchy. The record, on the other hand, suggests otherwise. It indicates that Chesterton backed Titterton's position to the hilt. Maurice Reckitt, for example, has written that Chesterton, on returning to London, upheld Titterton's line, endorsing his editor's slogan: "Keep calm, and stand up for the strikers."34 Evidence in support of Reckitt's recollection can be found in Chesterton's first article published after his trip in May 1926. Here he voiced support for the position his paper assumed during the strike35 and, furthermore, gave his imprimatur to Titterton's analysis of the causes of the dis turbance and its significance in terms of English working-class his tory. Trade unionism, Chesterton wrote, represents the inevitable reaction of Christian democracy against the abnormal concentra tion of capitalism.36 Chesterton did, however, voice concern about certain troubling tendencies in the trade union movement that threatened to stifle rank-and-file representation. In an earlier article he reiterated sup port for the trade unions and their right to strike but insisted that "a big trade union'' could not in itselfbe a solution to Britain's indus trial troubles. The real issue, wrote Chesterton, is "big organization'' in both labor and business. His fear was that the labor movement might be absorbed by the Labour Party and thereby co-opted by the party system: And at the end of that process it would be as impossible to intro duce a free yeoman or a small guild into the system as it would be to introduce a Green Knight of Chivalry or a Purple Castle of romance into a game of chess played with two colours. 37 The trade unions, under the control of a single large organization subservient to the Labour Party, could become every bit as power-
Distributism and British Politics 16 7 fu1 as the trusts against which they were supposed to contend. This was Gregory Macdonald's fear and one of the major reasons he opposed the TUC's decision to call a general strike: "I became con vinced that if the general strike were successful it would mean the transfer of executive power, or sovereignty, from King and Parlia ment to a non-elected and untried group of union leaders.38 Chesterton, however, had not yet become as pessimistic as Mac donald (though he soon would). His anarcho-syndicalist sympathies fashioned during the pre-war years oflabor unrest encouraged him to believe that the workers would be able to reject any attempts by their leaders to establish authoritarian control over the trade union movement. In fact, this hope convinced Chesterton of the necessity of supporting Henry Slesser's efforts to win over the Labour Party to Distributist principles. For Chesterton, the real significance of the general strike was not the problem of big labor bureaucrats but the courage of the rank and file in challenging those who were determined to destroy trade unionism: "I have been bored . . . by the merely mechanical praises of English moderation and order. I know well that they have often been merely praises of snobbery and apathy. I know well that they have missed many opportunities by which nations at once more logical and more impetuous have done great things. "39 In short,
Chesterton's chief concern was not that a successful strike would mean the transfer of power to union leaders but rather that trade unionism ("the pride in England is the pride of the Trade Union'') would fail to defend itself in the face of this perilous attack on its existence. Chesterton, therefore, was pleased that the trade unions rose to the challenge, and this is why he could write on his return to London that from the continent England indeed looked like an island but also as a mountain: ''And perhaps all the more like a mountain at the moment when it happens to look like a volcano."40 Contrary to what Chesterton hoped, but in line with what Mac donald feared, the general strike turned out to be a disaster for the British labor movement. Although the TUC called an end to the strike on 12 May, many disgruntled miners stayed out for another six months. Workers who supported the action in the long run forfeited millions of pounds in lost wages, and thereafter the trade unions
168 CATHOLIC I N T E LLECTUALS AND T H E CHALLENGE O F D E M O C RACY
experienced a considerable decline in membership. The government throughout the long and arduous months of negotiations had given way to the mine owners, and, consequently, it should have been no surprise that the aftermath would be bitter and vindictive. After the strike was called off, Parliament passed the Trades Disputes and Trade Union Bill. Among other things, this legislation proposed to outlaw sympathetic strikes, forbid civil servants from joining TUC a:ffiliated organizations, and severely limit the use of trade union political funds. In the House of Commons, Henry Slesser led the attack on cer tain legal aspects of the bill for the Labour Party. The bill, in his view, constituted an egregious assault on fundamental principles of individual rights. Along with G.K s Weekly and the Distributist League, Slesser both in Parliament and in various public debates focused public attention on Labour's claim that the legislation would effectively place workers in a condition of slavery. The bill, they asserted, was a conspiracy of the Federation of British Industries and of conservatives in Parliament to destroy the trade union movement. The Trades Disputes and Trade Union Bill was passed into law in 1927. From this point on Chesterton and his friends began to lose faith in the possibility of converting the Labour Party and the trade union movement to Distributist ideas. But what ultimately turned Distributists against conventional politics was their conviction that labor had decided to collaborate with industrial capitalism and the governing establishment. This change in attitude appears to have grown out of the so called "Mond-Turner" talks. Throughout 1928 and 1929 a group of industrial magnates, inspired by Sir Alfred Mond, chairman of Imperial Chemical Industries (in Chesterton's opinion, the quin tessential "monopoly capitalist"), undertook a series of discussions with major trade union officials led by Ben Turner, chairman of the TUC General Council. The purpose of these deliberations was to overcome long-standing differences between management and labor and to arrive at some compromise in the interests of industrial har mony. The discussions were purposely kept secret for fear of rais ing the wrath of extremists in both camps. In July 1929 the groups published a report which indicated that the employers were willing to make concessions, including recognition of trade unions as the
Distributism and British Politics 16 9
sole bargaining agencies for workers and acceptance of changes in unemployment insurance in favor of labor. Most importantly, the Mond-Turner report recommended the establishment ofjoint con sultative machinery by the Trades Union Congress, the Federation of British Industries, and the National Confederation of Employers' Organizations. These proposals were bitterly attacked by Distribu tists, for they considered this closer understanding and coopera tion between employers and workers as harbingers of the dreaded servile state. Chesterton, Slesser, and Penty in numerous articles throughout 1928 and 1929 tried to counter the popularity of the Mond-Turner proposals by insisting that the trade unions begin to push for ulti mate control and ownership of industrial production. The process should first start, they argued, in the coal industry. As a means to this end they suggested that the government seize control of the mines and lease them to a federation of miners' guilds, which even tually would take over both ownership and management of the industry. 41 The three men failed to convince either the trade unionists or the government. Disillusionment quickly set in. The TUC's will ingness to participate in the Mond-Turner talks represented, for Distributists, an indication that the trade unions had relinquished
their struggle for ownership of the means of production. The trade union movement had forsaken the guild idea for the promise of security. From this time on, the Distributists moved further away from conventional politics and sought to gain support for their schemes through a variety of other expedients, including a politi cal alternative proposed by Hilaire Belloc: the restoration of monar chical government. Was there any validity to Chesterton's and Belloc's political analysis? Was it an exaggeration to assert that by the late 1920s the trade union movement had become absorbed by the party system and that the electorate had no real power to control politicians and bureaucrats? Chesterton's and Belloc's political critique, which assumed the existence of a secret plot to eliminate class and party conflict in the interests of an industrial and financial plutocracy, has frequently been dismissed as the raving of bitter men obsessed with conspiracies. 42
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However, recent scholarship on the structure of British politics that has been able to take advantage of major changes in the Official Secrets Act (reducing the duration of the ban on examining state documents from fifty to thirty years) corroborates certain key tenets of the Chesterton-Belloc political critique. For example, the histo rian Keith Middlemas has argued that by the early r92os Britain's nineteenth-century political system had broken down under the weight ofindustrial conflict, the Irish problems, and World War l.43 What took its place was a government of "corporate bias," that is, government not by Parliament but by a corporate triangle consisting of the chief representative bodies ofbusiness, labor, and, on the gov ernment's side, officials of the state. Another contemporary scholar of British politics, Keith Burgess, has corroborated Middlemas's argument, though instead of accepting the latter's triangular model, Burgess identifies a series of "power blocs" which had a similar func tion. Burgess sheds particular light on the role of bureaucrats who, though supposedly disinterested, had special connections and status group ties with the various worlds of Oxbridge, industry, and finance. Burgess confirms the emergence of a power bloc by the r93os that would successfully control British life for the next forty years. This power bloc was dominated by the bureaucrat: These were personified by the more 'progressive' sections of big industrial capital, represented by employers in the growing home industries and including huge combinations like ICI with their oligopolistic control of world markets. There was, in addi tion, the expanding body of salaried employees who phased into a new managerial elite at the highest echelons of administration in commerce, industry, and government.44 A major figure in this political transformation was David Lloyd George, the bete noire of the Chesteron and Belloc. Lloyd George was one of the first politicians to recognize the necessity of a man agerial concept of government to overcome party and class differ ences. He intended to create a special administrative body, or center group of power brokers, to regulate political and economic life. What particularly frightened Lloyd George and the moguls of
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industry were the anarcho-syndicalist activities of l9n-1914, in which Chesterton and Belloc had played leading roles. These ac tivities clearly revealed that the official labor leadership was unable to control the extreme fringes of the working-class movement by fusing it with parliamentary democracy. Syndicalist activity had potentially disastrous consequences for industrial production and political order, a situation all the more serious because of worsening diplomatic relations with Germany. The attempts to formulate a coalition government during the constitutional crisis of l9n, together with David Lloyd George's efforts after the war to form a National Industrial Convention com posed of government officials, business, and labor leaders who would discuss industrial problems, were, in Middlemas's thesis, the first attempts to create a formal, triangular power bloc. Supporters of such attempts hoped that a special tripartite national body, through consensus among its leadership, would guide Britain away from class antagonism and political crises and thereby ensure the kind of harmony required for steady economic growth. In the words of W. Milne-Baily of the TUC Research Department, a leading pro ponent of the new cooperation theory as a means of ending eco nomic conflict, Britain's traditional political institutions were not fit for the task: ''A Parliament of the ordinary democratic kind, elected on a territorial basis, is largely ignorant, and is bound to be ignorant of industrial needs and problems, and to that extent is a very unsat isfactory authority for industrial regulation and legislation."45 What Milne-Baily, Lloyd George, and others had in mind was a mana gerial concept of government, and this process was capped, accord ing to Middlemas, by the Mand-Turner talks of 1928. In February 1929 the National Confederation of Employers Organizations, the Federation of British Industries, and the TUC agreed to undertake permanent discussions on fundamental ques tions ofindustrial legislation, unemployment, and national economic policy. Due to the fact that the TUC and employers associations had not succeeded in making their institutions fully representative, and because their new alliance with the state was vulnerable to revolt from below, it became official policy from the very beginning to keep this triangular relationship secret. Middlemas argues that by the
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1930s the new institutional collaboration had supplemented the par liamentary system and was largely responsible for the relative har mony of the interwar years. During this period the function of the political parties changed, and henceforth, under the tutelage of the triangular bloc, ideological differences and substantive discussions largely disappeared from party warfare. Thus, long before 1945, Par liament had ceased to be the supreme governing body in Britain. It subordinated itself to the managerial powers of the state's bureau cratic apparatus. Parliament's function was to be an electoral source of the majority which provided the party element in government, though, according to Middlemas, the electoral cycle itself had no effect whatever on economic and political decisions.46 If anything, the old political system was used by the corporate leaders to win popular mandates for decisions they either had already arrived at or would soon make. Both Middlemas and Burgess describe a process in the consoli dation ofpower away from Parliament and popular democracy that, at the time, was identified with exquisite precision in the political analysis of Chesterton and Belloc. The formation of Middlemas's corporate triangle was called "Mondism" by G.K s Weekly. The paper frequently remarked on the interlocking interests and relationships between government officers, bankers, industrial magnates, and trade union leaders. Indeed, Mond himselfwas referred to in G.K s Weekly as the ''Apostle of Rationalization," an appellation that in the Weberian sense accords perfectly with the Middlemas thesis.47 The studies of Middlemas and Burgess demonstrate the relevance of Chesteron's and Belloc's political analysis. Rather than being an exaggerated or distorted description of political practice, their cri tique seems to have identified accurately a series of circumstances and events which brought about a substantial shift in power away from the locus of legitimate authority-Parliament-to special interest groups and bureaucrats. The acuity of their political analysis has not yet been recognized by most historians of modern British politics. 48 As early as September 1928, G.K s Weekly told its readers that it did not make any difference which party won power at the next gen eral election, because all three parties were pledged to obey the gov ernmental and industrial bureaucracies. As for the Mond-Turner
Distributism and British Politics r73
conferences, the paper accurately identified them as marking the accession of the official trade union leadership to the political estab lishment, thereby completing what Middlemas would later identify as the corporate triangle. The Labour Party politicians, the paper argued, had been converted to "respectability"; they had become a "real party" by entering the full political system with the under standing that all the rules laid down by parliamentary precedent would be scrupulously observed. Labor had now earned its emblem of respectability; its leaders had graciously become "good parlia mentarians," in violation of the old socialist revolutionary tradition: In the days of William Morris they had talked of destroying the Houses of Parliament by blowing them up or, more pic turesquely, of shelling them from the river. . . . But now their own aim is to preserve Parliament, to make it permanent, to make it safe.49 In February 1930 G.K s Weekly announced to its readers that it could no longer support parliamentary politics. Henceforth Distributists would work for revolution from without, since any changes would have to be imposed by forces other than legal, parliamentary actions. 50 Chesterton's comrade-in-arms, Hilaire Belloc, had rejected the parliamentary process long before his Distributist friends and the staff at G.K s Weekly. In The House ofCommons and Monarchy (1920 ) , Belloc chronicled the transformation of Parliament as a governing institution from that of a representative body to an oligarchy. In Belloc's opinion no oligarchy could function unless it were aristo cratic,51 and the idea of a natural aristocracy had long disappeared in England. Parliament, as the body representing a small money clique, no longer possessed the moral authority conferred upon it by general respect. The loss of aristocratic spirit was discernable in soci ety, wrote Belloc, by the decline of principle as the norm of public conduct. When the continuity of such moral tradition is broken, when wealth is divorced from manners and the gesture of the gen tleman is no longer appreciated as a special thing, the principle dis appears: "Once broken the thing dies and it cannot be restored."52 Belloc argued that the trade unions and other professional cor porations were rapidly rising to positions of power in the wake of
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Parliament's moral collapse. The Mond-Turner deliberations were a clear reflection of this transformation in the network of power. Yet in the long run such varied councils would not be able to exercise sovereign power on their own. These corporate bodies must be arranged and controlled by something external and superior to them in the interests of national unity. Given the disappearance of the aristocratic spirit in Britain, there was only one institution capable of providing this service, and that was monarchy. The virtues of monarchy, said Belloc, were that it could stand above the political fray, protecting the weak from the strong, pre venting the concentration of wealth in the hands of a selfish few, and securing the freedom of the courts ofjustice and the sources of pub lic opinion from corruption. All this the monarchy could do because it was responsible and would be held accountable for its political behavior. Further, Belloc argued, the lack of overt interference by the British monarchy in public affairs for over a century had brought new respect for the throne. It had now become a symbol, "gather ing towards itself the passionate patriotism of the people."S3 On the other hand, a Parliament run by an oligarchy that was not aristo cratic could never provide this service, for it was both irresponsible and unpopular. "Each individual in such an amorphous executive does harm with impunity because he can always say that it was not he that did it." In an obvious allusion to that old political warhorse, the Marconi affair, Belloc could assert that "no parliamentarian, since aristocracy failed in England, has gone to prison for a bribe taken or given."54 At the end of 1932, in a statement that seemed to mock the League's fantasies of converting the Labour Party to Distributist principles, Belloc wrote that he had given up on Parliament ever since the Marconi scandal: I have since that date refused to take any further part in any attempt to cleanse what I think is beyond cleansing. Public life now stinks with the stench of a mortal disease; it can no longer be cured.ss Chesterton's own political disillusionment expanded in the wake of Belloc's cynicism. In August 1935 Chesterton could write that as
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things now stand, he was prepared to examine the offerings of fas cism. Parliamentarianism, on the other hand, was not worth look ing into at all . 56 Such were the political dispositions of G. K. Chesterton, Hilaire Belloc, and the Distributist circle at the outset of the 1930s, a decade which, burdened with the economic crisis of capitalism and the rise of the dictators, would make those turbulent pre-World War I years seem like a placid twilight before the storm.
C HAPT E R 7
The New Distributists
T
he English Distributists, armed with an agenda sharply honed by Chesterton's and Belloc's struggles with big busi ness and the governing establishment, entered the decade of world depression with a great deal of self-confidence and strongly committed to radical economic, political, and social reconstruction. The Distributist movement was strengthened at this juncture by the infusion of new and younger recruits, ensuring that the ideas of Chesterton and Belloc would be carried on with energy. Among the more influential of these men were Douglas Jerrold, whom D. B . Wyndham-Lewis called "the brains of the English Right,"1 Arnold Lunn, Douglas Woodruff, and Christopher Hollis. Much like the first generation of Distributists, these young lions shared similar views on what they considered the baleful errors of the Renaissance ("the rebirth of pagan pride," said Lunn),2 the Protes tant Reformation, and the Enlightenment. These historical episodes were directly responsible for the three scourges of the twentieth cen tury: liberalism, monopoly capitalism, and collectivist socialism. Lunn and Hollis, whose conversion to Catholicism was pre pared by Chesterton and Belloc, as well as Woodruff and Jerrold, were not mild-mannered religious dilettantes but rather singularly militant Catholics, uncompromising in their political views, and pugnacious propagandists in the fight for Distributism.3 Arnold Lunn, for instance, in a style appropriate to such spirit, once told a friend, the Duke of Alba, of a "pleasant incident" in which he "flattened out an Oxford don and Eton master, both of whom were wearing the fashionable colour pink," an affectation that apparently offended him.4 The episode probably involved little more than an exchange of words in heated debate, but the language attests to the
The New Distributists 177
combativeness of Lunn's style-a studied effort on his part to repli cate the ways of Hilaire Belloc. He lamented the fact that other Catholics did not have the courage to carry on as he did. As a Catho lic apologist Lunn was notorious for his love of stirring up the mob.5 Perhaps the most prominent of the new Distributists was Doug las Woodruff. Woodruff had a distinguished undergraduate career at Oxford. As a member of the Oxford debating team, along with his life-long friend, Christopher Hollis, he toured the world with great success. In 1933 he married the daughter of the Second Lord Acton. As editor of the London Tablet from 1936 through 1967, Woodruff turned that periodical into a leading voice of English Catholicism, and, in the opinion of his supporters, one of the most influential papers in Great Britain and Europe, especially in the area of international affairs. 6 The new Distributists learned from Belloc to look beneath the veneer of political respectability, where they would always find a sleazy miasma of monied interests, plutocrats, and wire-pullers manipulating democratic systems for their own selfish ends: thus their strong distrust of democracy. The political temperament and public deportment of Lunn and his friends were shaped more by Belloc than Chesterton. Michael Derrick noted this shift in direc tion when he observed that Douglas Woodruff, as the years passed, moved away from the Chestertonian liberalism that marked his early years. Chesterton, said Derrick, was by instinct a reforming radical; Woodruff a conserving traditionalist.7 Like Belloc, the new Distributists were obsessed with the intrinsic sinfulness of man and the need to find a fixed and authoritative moral standard to govern social life. Chesterton's approach to such issues, compared to that of Belloc and the New Distributists, was far less cynical, more opti mistic concerning human nature, and essentially more sympathetic to the rough edges of the democratic process. Belloc's preoccupa tion with the folly of human behavior made him less sanguine than Chesterton about the possibility of realizing democracy in England. "I still regard democracy as the noblest and least stable of human forms of government," Belloc wrote Hoffman Nickerson, but "mechanically impossible in a large state." The habit of calling Par liaments democratic, he added, "seems to me like calling petrol a
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wine," for all human things are nasty "with the exception of the taste for wine and oysters, first love, good verse, and the victory of one's people in the field. To this catalogue some would add parental affec tion."8 It was the politically jaded but bombastic Belloc who set the tone for the vanguard of the new Distributists. Arnold Lunn wrote to Belloc that as a youth he needed the "blast of dynamite which you effectively provided . . . to shatter my simple boyish faith in the Whig-Don-School ofhistory."9 After his mentor blasted a breach in those walls of stifling conventionalism, other Catholic writers like Christopher Dawson could receive lit erary bouquets from the academic establishment that were denied to Belloc, the man who made it all possible. Dawson, wrote Lunn, would later say the same thing as Belloc, but less aggressively and in language sufficiently sanitized to please the English dons. Belloc's breaching the barriers, however, gave such Catholic writers their opportunity.10 By the 1930s, after the disappointments of trying to turn the Labour Party in a Distributist direction, the "new Distributists" group began to look on the political right for recruits to their cause. Woodruff, Lunn, Jerrold, and Hollis, for example, believed liberal ism was bankrupt in Britain and identified themselves with what they variously called "new," "true," or "radical" conservatism. The "idealistic conservative," wrote Arnold Lunn, by which he meant the old-fashioned country squire who recognized that place brought duties, "has more in common with the idealistic Radical than either has with many of their nominal allies." The virtue of Distributism, he claimed, is that it is more radical and revolutionary than social ism and more conservative than modern conservatism.11 The social and political views of Belloc, as well as his interpre tation of British and European history, were accepted as gospel by the new Distributists. Belloc's attack on the party system, said Jer rold, was as striking as Luther's denunciation of the sale of indul gences. The Servile State could be seen as the equivalent of the "Ninety-five Theses." It was no less then the most "penetrating and prophetic piece of political pamphleteering of the century."12 In the view of Woodruff, there was no one in the history of English litera ture who showed such versatility and mastery of his many subjects as Belloc.13
The New Distributists 179
In 1931 Belloc, along with Alan Herbert, T. S. Eliot, Roy Camp bell, and Wyndham Lewis, by now all stalwarts of the right, con vinced Douglas Jerrold to take over editorship of The English Review, an influential and highly-respected literary journal. Between 1931 and 1936 the magazine, under Jerrold's direction, attempted to re define Tory conservatism along Distributist lines. Jerrold champi oned what he called a "New Conservatism," which, in contrast to the party of Stanley Baldwin, opposed big business, low wages, vested interests, class privilege, and any sympathies with commu nism. Jerrold and his associates made communism a central focus of their attacks on contemporary problems; indeed they revealed an obsession with the expansion of international Marxism.14 By the 1920s Belloc himself had begun to focus increasingly on the Soviet Union, which soon displaced the hated Prussia as the principal enemy in matters relating to international affairs. Douglas Jerrold at The English Review put his own Distributist twist on the "true meaning" of conservatism: its abiding "axiom," he insisted, is that the only guarantee of a just social order is "a wide distribution of private ownership."15 Unless Parliament under a uni versal franchise achieved this end, a dictatorship would be not only inevitable but necessary. 16 However, Jerrold was more optimistic than his mentor Belloc in that he hoped a revived Tory Party, charged with the appropriate dose of right-wing principles, might reform the parliamentary system, obviating the need for a dictatorship. As of the spring of 1933, however, Jerrold appears to have despaired of the possibility of finding social justice through a "reformed" Parliament. In a revealing article in an American jour nal that claimed to be both Distributist and fascist, he urged the construction ofwhat he called the ·�uthoritarian'' or "Ethical State" as a cure for Britain's postwar problems. In a spirit akin to that of the integral Catholics of the Vogelsang school,17 Jerrold proposed an ·�nglo-Saxon'' version of self-government where decisions and power would devolve to the various agricultural, craft, and service professions united through a strong central government (ideally headed by a monarch) that served the best interests of the nation as a whole. This was precisely what Belloc had recommended, namely, a corporate-type system with functional rather than regional representation held together by a powerful leader above special
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interests. Governance in the "Ethical State" would not be "between" but "above" capital and labor, retaining something of the independ ent tradition of the Tory squirarchy. All this was in the best spirit of Edmund Burke, Chesterton, and Belloc, claimed Jerrold, and would provide the necessary means for reconciling the two most basic wants of the English people: "the passion for Liberty and the pas sion for Order-the desire for Status and the desire for Freedom."18 Douglas Jerrold made repeated efforts to move the Conserva tive Party toward the right and on many occasions tried to run him self as a Tory MP for the House of Commons. He was never able to secure the backing of the party's selection committee, claimed his friend Douglas Woodruff, because it did not think he "had the right gifts" to be a successful candidate.19 Finally, Jerrold and some ofhis right-wing colleagues, notably Sir Charles Petrie, Leo Amery, and Sir Robert Horne, lost patience with the fecklessness of the official party. They organized a splinter group called the "Independent Conservatives" and in preparation for the 1935 general election ran Lord Lloyd on a corporatist platform as a challenger to Stanley Baldwin. The new Distributists for the most part were not only politically conservative but, like their mentor Belloc, also religiously con servative, with a strong distaste for liberal Catholics. This certainly applies to Woodruff, Jerrold, Lunn, and Hollis. Woodruff was a great admirer of Pius IX's Syllabus ofErrors for its condemnation of "the dark side of nineteenth-century freedom'' (the loss ofimagi nation in thought for Catholic writers was a small price to pay for the preservation of orthodoxy, he claimed), and he established the Tablet as the paramount voice of conservative Catholicism in the English-speaking world.20 Under his direction the paper champi oned the virtues of traditional Catholicism and the Latin Mass and held forth against liberal efforts to reform the liturgy. (After retire ment as editor in 1967 he was greatly saddened by the Tablet 's new directions embracing liberal causes.) Woodruff believed that there was a direct correlation between sympathy for a "planned economy" and the prevalence of liberal social and political thinking among Catholics. Not only were such ideas foolish concerning practical matters, they also induced Catha-
The New Distributists 181
lies to soft-pedal on religious dogma. The best example of these ten dencies, he claimed, was Dorothy Day's Catholic Worker move ment, an influential effort in America, with branches in Britain, to challenge the attraction of communism among the urban laboring classes. Woodruff was scandalized, for instance, when the Catholic Worker suggested that the pope consider the canonization of Ma hatma Gandhi, whom Woodruff called "the unbaptized, anti Christian pagan." Day and her followers believed that Gandhi represented the best universal features of the Catholic ideas of broth erhood. But one should not create allies and converts by "watering down the faith to suit the customer," insisted Woodruff. Conversion "means literally a con-version," a turning around of the soul. This "must be crucifying." "Our Faith is and must be to the Jews a stum bling block and to the intelligentsia . . . foolishness."21 Arnold Lunn was no less a foe of "modernizing," liberal ten dencies. As regards the reforms recommended by the liturgical movement, Lunn wondered in retrospect whether he would have joined a Church that embraced them.22 II
Throughout the r93o s the followers of Chesterton and Belloc worked diligently to inform the public of the virtues of Distributism as an alternative to capitalism and the socialist version of a planned economy. There was no common agreement among Distributists about methods or priorities in their general attack on modern indus trialism. 23 One group felt that it was necessary to forsake large-scale industrialism and return to an agricultural village-based economy. Those associated with A. J. Penty and Father Vincent McNabb went further, advocating the abolition of machinery altogether, a position which helped fuel the public impression that Distributists were unrealistic visionaries pining for a return to the Middle Ages. Other Distributists gave priority to monetary reform. Eric Gill, for instance, was persuaded that almost all economic and even moral problems were related to usury and what he called the "trade in money." Gill advocated a new monetary system that would link
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purchasing power to agricultural and industrial productivity. The currency structure as presently constituted, in his view, served as a tool of bankers and moneylenders in whose interests the power of monarchy had been destroyed. Most Distributists approached money issues along these lines. Belloc, Gregory Macdonald, and others further elaborated on such thinking in various essays expos ing what they regarded as an international monetary conspiracy. As Distributists argued among themselves about the ways to save modern society from the evils of materialism and greed, Ches terton served as a mediator or referee, candidly encouraging their debates in the pages of G.K s Weekly. Although some critics called the Distributists feckless wind-bags, hopelessly tangled in dis agreements with each other, their common agreement about the general ideals upon which the new Christian social order should be built is worth noting. Herbert Shove expressed it best when he said that Distributism was more than a mere redistribution of wealth and private ownership; it was rather a return to "the philosophy of bal ance," a condition in which both the needs of the heart and the mind would be met. "Intellectual freedom'' mattered most, and this could best be satisfied when men held property. 24
All Distributists were anti-urban; the metropolis removed indi
viduals from "the life-blood of the soil." However, there was never any official position that all people in the new order had to practice farming or handcraftsmanship. Basing his argument on the ideal ofliberty emphasized by Herbert Shove, H. E. Humphries, author of the League's first textbook, Liberty and Property (1928), pointed out that Distributists were both pragmatic and reasonable: The Distributist is not a fanatic. If a man wants to do things by machinery, or work in a factory, he will do so. Some people like hand-made goods, others are indifferent . . . . Those who do not want the responsibility of property and like to rely on a master, will work for a wage on the farm or in the workshop. Our con ception of a civilized state is one in which men will want respon sibility, and exercise of their own wills in the control of their own business . . . . The essential is liberty, and when there is the variety . . . liberty is as completely established as is possible in economic affairs.25
The New Distributists 183
Critics have assailed Distributists for failing to develop a prac tical, systematic plan for social, economic, and political reform.26 The charge is somewhat unfair. From the beginning, Chesterton's journal and the League were meant to be organs of propaganda to raise public consciousness about the need for change and to consider alternative methods of production and distribution. They did not fail in this mission: the influence of Distributism has been consid erable.27 Furthermore, over the years Chesterton, Belloc and their followers did develop a Distributist program, though it never ap peared in any single piece of writing. Chesterton's own proposals for a Distributist order appeared in scattered articles throughout the pages of G. K s Weekly and in a book entitled The Outline ofSanity (1926). He recommended a two pronged assault. The first invited individual citizens to check the drift toward monopoly and the destruction of small ownership by boycotting big shops, chain stores, trusts, and the like. Once the cit izenry recognized that they could modify the drift toward the servile state, once the plutocratic pressures were reduced, the appetite for private ownership would return. Government also could take on some responsibilities at this stage of the struggle, both by forbidding plutocratic business practices such as price wars and below-cost sell ing that undermined small businesses, and by providing legal aid to small property holders. The second part of Chesterton's reform package called for the construction of a model Distributist community along the lines of Eric Gill's cooperative experiment at Ditchling Common, which Gill hoped would serve as a moral and practical inspiration-a "cell of good living," in the words of Donald Attwater-for building a better society. 28 Again, Chesterton appealed to the government to provide his project a helping hand through a variety of programs, including, among others, differential taxation to discourage the sale of small property to big proprietors, the creation of opportunities for the propertyless to purchase land, the elimination of primogeni ture, subsidization of experiments in small property holdings, the sponsorship of educational programs for teaching handicrafts and farming, the construction of a vast network of regional or local market systems to replace the huge marketing centers, such as Covent Garden in London, and so forth. Finally, he urged workers
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to organize special guild associations that would exercise coopera tive control of all industry, with the ultimate aim of buying out the capitalists as owners of the means of production. Chesterton's call for such comprehensive government action had the dreaded odor of Fabianism, but he was convinced that the legislation could be effec tive if it were made intelligible to the average citizen. A special Dis tributist chancellor of the exchequer, not being "a servant of the F.B.I. or the :financiers, or the oil magnates, or any other system of wire-pulling or back-stair politics . . . could word his act in clear, simple language, having nothing to conceal, nothing to 'give away,' and no axe to grind. "29 Chesterton's appeal for a new Distributist order was clearly revolutionary, yet he emphasized that participation in it must be voluntary. it would be counterproductive to coerce people onto the countryside or into trade guilds because that would undermine the personal freedom that was the cornerstone of Distributism. Like wise, a draconian confiscation ofwealth and property would destroy the love of ownership that Distributists were trying to revive. Unlike socialism or communism, Distributism was not a thing that could be "done" to people; it could be realized only through their approval and active participation. To Chesterton, Distributist reform meant moral change: But it must be done in the spirit of a religion, of a revolution, and (I will add) of a renunciation. They must want to do it as they want to drive invaders out of a country or to stop the spread of a plague. 30 Besides Chesterton's program of reforms, it is also necessary to note the work of the various branches of the Distributist League that formulated numerous practical proposals for social and eco nomic reform. The most significant of these was an unemployment manifesto called "The Birmingham Scheme," drafted by the League's Birmingham branch in June 1928. The plan was updated periodi cally, and more than seventeen thousand copies had been published by 1933· The purpose of the Birmingham plan was to eliminate the economic waste of the dole and relieve industrial unemployment by reviving Britain's decaying agricultural sector. It called for the gov-
The New Distributists 185
ernment to address the problems of high imported food costs and unemployment by relocating workers on the soil as farmers. The Birmingham Distributists aimed to establish a free peasantry which could sustain itself on the land and yet supply produce to the indus trial sector by marketing its surplus. All this could be accomplished, they insisted, by a minimum outlay above the cost of funding the dole. The plan was well received in Catholic circles, some recognizing a striking similarity between the Birmingham plan and President Roosevelt's scheme to encourage economically distressed families in rural areas to become self-sufficient. 3 1 In April 1930 the Distributist League asked the prime minister to appoint a royal commission to study the feasibility ofimplementing their proposals. Unfortunately, the government failed to give any serious consideration to the Birm ingham scheme. Belloc's suggestions for the creation of Distributism reached their most complete form in An Essay on the Distribution ofProperty (1936) and The Crisis of Our Civilization (1937) . Belloc's thinking along these lines was more detailed than Chesterton's yet also more pessimistic, for by 1936 he had almost given up hope of reversing the onslaught of capitalism, socialism, and big government. Any gen eral scheme for the restoration of freedom and property was use less in Belloc's mind because contemporary society had deteriorated beyond the point of repair. Distributism, therefore, could never be created by the state, for what was needed was a change in mood: "It is too late to reinforce it by design . . . our effort must everywhere be particular, local, and in its origins, small."32 This explains why there is a deliberate vagueness in Belloc's writings about the specific economic and political steps needed to bring about Distributism. The conditions for its success demanded a popular recognition of the evil effects of capitalism and collectivism, which would then be followed by a revolution in values and ideas; political change would come after this requisite moral transformation. But Belloc was not sanguine about the matter: "To restore private property, however, must be a very long business, and has no chance of success unless people desire it, which I think in this country they no longer do."33 Still, in An Essay on the Restoration of Property Belloc labored to develop a fairly detailed plan for the reestablishment of a small inde pendent peasantry and classes of craftsmen and merchants, the three
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socioeconomic groupings he regarded necessary for the creation of a free society. Since the pervasiveness of monopoly capitalism had almost completely destroyed the possibility of a wide division of property in Britain, Belloc felt it necessary to invoke the power of the state to aid the small man in regaining his freedom. In even more detail than Chesterton, he outlined a series of suggestions for differential taxation schemes, state-protected cooperative credit institutions, progressive taxes against the sale of property, and, most importantly, the creation of self-governing, legally charted guilds modeled along medieval lines to serve as protective agencies for the private ownership of property. Belloc underscored the necessity of the interventionist state because a well-balanced system of property holding could never naturally emerge in the face of monopolistic economic tendencies. The new order would have to be artificially induced and, once restored, constantly sustained lest it lapse back into capitalism. Just as unchecked parliamentary politics turned to plutocracy, so private property tended to capitalism in a free enter prise economy and thereby threatened to choke the middle classes, the "fly-wheel" of society, as Belloc called them. By 1937 Belloc was suggesting that it may well require dictatorial powers to save what he called "the middle class standard" from the powers of plutoc racy and high finance. 34 Yet any talk of merely political and economic reform was so much persiflage, for in Belloc's thinking essential change required first and foremost a recovery of the general spirit of Catholicism. Institutions, he insisted, were shaped by the moral spirit of the cul ture, and they were sustained only so long as people adhered to the spiritual impulse from which the institutions arose. Convinced that economic freedom historically had grown out of the Catholic faith, Belloc maintained that Distributism could not remedy social fail ures until the world were converted to Catholicism. "We cannot build up a society synthetically," wrote Belloc, "for it is an organic thing; we must see to it first that the vital principle is there from which the characters of the organism will develop."35 As in all matters, Belloc was more cynical than Chesterton and less tolerant of the untidiness of the democratic process; thus there was little chance, in his mind, that effective reform would come
The New Distributists 187
through the system as presently constituted. "In every respect, wher ever I turn," he wrote Nickerson, "the same conclusion is borne in upon me, that our social and political condition in this country is incurable."36 England would need a dictatorship, one that could wield effective power over the autonomous guild networks that would be part of the Distributist state. Since monarchy had been a traditional component of England's governing practices, Belloc was convinced that a monarch, aided by what he called the "Councils of Real Interests" {representatives of the various guilds), could most effectively provide the responsible authoritarian leadership neces sary for the large modern state. However, unlike his inspiration, Charles Maurras and the Action Fran;aise, Belloc was never enam ored of the idea of royalty per se; he rather saw it as the most prac tical mechanism for meeting the authoritarian role that degenerate society so desperately needed. What Belloc really desired was a dynasty of heroic strong men who could force society out of the narrow paths of petty hedonism: "I have no doubt that monarchy is what is needed now in every European nation . . . but . . . an exist ing dynasty like that of Philip of Orleans would be of the least effect . . . . What will save our society when it comes will be some new line of dynasties sprung from energetic individual men who shall seize power."37
C HAPT E R 8
The Appeal of Fascism
T
he anti-parliamentarian sentiments of Chesterton and Bel loc, combined with Belloc's quest for a Napoleonic hero, made them and the new Distributists favorably disposed to the exploits of Mussolini and his mission to create a "New Roman Empire" in the robes of Catholicism. For this reason, the careers and political ideas of Chesterton and Belloc have been linked to the extreme Right that came into full bloom in the interwar years. For example, a leading historian of the British Right, J. R. Jones, sug gests that Distributism reached its fullest articulation in the pro grams of Sir Oswald Mosley, leader of the British Union of Fascists. In some circles, both Chesterton and Belloc earned the reputations of having been fascist fellow travelers or, at the least, enemies of democracy.1 Mussolini deliberately appealed to Catholic sympathies by link ing his Fascist regime to traditional Catholic corporatist ideas. Italy's corrupt legislative assembly with its bickering politicians was to be replaced by a corporative chamber consisting of professional and trade associations. The nation, achieving integration through the corpo rations, was declared an "organic whole." Labor of all kinds was now a social duty. The various corporations were to be democratically controlled by their membership, private property was safeguarded, excessive competition curbed, and disputes between management and labor were to be settled collectively with the aid of arbitration courts. The Fascists claimed to use the idea of corporatism as an instrument to suppress excessive individualism, special interest groups, and big business and finance for the national good of the organic state. 188
The Appeal of Fascism 18 9
In what ways did G. K. Chesterton share the Fascist worldview? The syndicalist, anti-statist ideas that Fascism had appropriated to its cause would have found a natural resonance in the political con cerns of Chesterton and Belloc. Those English laborers who had marched to the drums of syndicalism in the turbulent years before World War I had a deep distrust of the trade union officials and party politicians, who, they believed, had sold out to the moguls of capitalism. As we have seen, the men involved in this revolutionary style unionism were influenced by Chesterton and Belloc, and the two writers offered the movement strong journalistic support. They viewed syndicalist activity as a healthy reaction to the advancement of the servile state, and they welcomed the kind of participatory democracy and desire for ownership that this revolutionary union ism encouraged. Chesterton must be understood during these pre-war years as an integral part of a larger intellectual movement in protest against the state.2 This protest appeared on the political level in the guild socialist movement; it was manifested philosophically in what was called pluralism. The intellectuals who were associated with pluralism drew their inspiration from a variety of sources, but chiefly from Lord Acton, a Catholic thinker who was keenly aware of the corruption of state power, and who also was sympathetic to the Whig notion that free dom is best preserved when power is dispersed.3 Above all , plural ism was a revolt against the Hegelian idealistic theory of state, which taken to its logical end would destroy the liberty of the individual. Belloc played a central role here, for his concept of the servile state was not only a protest against German idealism but a prognostica tion of the form which a future Hegelian society would assume.4 What united the pluralists was their rejection of the state as morally sovereign and their opposition to using its agencies as tools for social reform.5 It must be remembered that the Liberal Party's decision to expand the social role of government had helped drive Chester ton and Belloc from its ranks. The Fabians carried these statist tendencies even further. George Bernard Shaw, for example, cham pioned a paternalistic government: "the State may be trusted with the rent of the country . . . with the land, the capital, and the
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organization of national industry-with all the sources of produc tion, in short, which are now abandoned to the cupidity of irre sponsible private individuals."6 The leading pre-World War I English pluralist was John Neville Figgis. Figgis worked out his ideas with the help of the legal theorist F. W. Maitland, and by drawing on the writings of Otto von Gierke, a German historian who believed that the medieval corporate ideal underlay the whole of Western historical development. Accepting the anarchist assumption that large-scale organizations necessitate oligarchy and dehumanizing bureaucra cies, Figgis asserted that individuals should be allowed to pursue their own self-development within the framework of voluntary asso ciations with a minimum of interference from governmental au thorities. Like Chesterton, his theory of associations, according to which the group would have rights over the state, recognized that the best social structure was one that provided for the greatest devel opment of individual personality. 7 Figgis's pluralist arguments were carried out chiefly in terms of the Anglican Church, which in his view possessed a corporate per sonality that had evolved independently of any government. Thus he insisted that the state had no natural right to wield unrestricted power over it. Although he focused on the Anglican Church, Fig gis contended that his theory of corporate freedom had a wider con text and could be applied to all groups that had functions of primary socialization: the family, trade unions, universities, and various pro fessional organizations. The state did not create any of these groups: they arose out of the "natural associative instincts of mankind" and should be treated as individuals. 8 The pluralist state envisioned by Figgis was reflected in both guild socialism and Distributism. As noted previously, these move ments had important links to Anglican intellectuals and both advo cated voluntary, self-governing corporations with claims over the state. Figgis himself praised guild socialism and Distributism as illustrations of pluralism in practice; guild socialists and Distributists of many stripes acknowledged their debt to pluralist writers.9 Concern for the independence of groups within the state led many guild socialists and Distributists to welcome the appearance
The Appeal of Fascism 1 9 1
of corporatist governments following World War I. The first to win their praise was Gabrielle D'Annunzio's short-lived "Regency of Camara," established in Fiume in 1919 . D'Annunzio vowed to turn Fiume into a model city amidst a Europe gone mad with capitalism. His constitution called for the creation of corporations for workers and employers, universal suffrage, a governing body based on func tional representation, and dictatorial power for the leader in times of crises. Similarly, Mussolini's experiment in corporatism initially received wide support from guild socialists and Distributists. A. J. Penty, for instance, held that the Italian Fascists were putting into practice the principles of Rerum Novarum. Like many pluralists, Penty took Mussolini's corporatist constitution at face value and believed it similar to his own vision of Distributism. On paper at least, Italian industry was to be controlled by self-governing cor porations (which Penty saw as just another name for the regulative guild) , large-scale industries were closely regulated by a central authority functioning in the public interest, wages were fixed, profits limited, and the state's governing body-Mussolini's Chamber of Deputies-operated on functional, not territorial, principles. Penty also complimented the Fascists for their efforts to foster a pros perous peasantry and their emphasis on national economic self sufficiency, two ideas close to the hearts of all Distributists. In short, "Fascism . . . exists to defend tradition and human values while it seeks a wider distribution of property; it is Distributist rather than Collectivist."10 The corporate aspect of Fascism won Penty's approval, but there was a side to Mussolini that greatly troubled him, and that was Mussolini's self-professed totalitarianism. Penty ultimately con cluded that these two faces of Fascism could not be reconciled. The state's claim to total sovereignty implied the centralization of authority and, as such, was opposed in principle to the true corpo ratist state, which reposed on the pluralistic postulate of federalism. Chesterton's analysis of Fascism had much in common with Penty's assessment of the matter. Like Penty, Chesterton initially welcomed the emergence of ltalian Fascism, in his case because it did away with what was most loathsome about parliamentary
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politics: the corruption of polity through the hidden power of money. In this respect, Mussolini's attack on parliamentarianism was a healthy response to the treason of Liberalism. The true Lib eral was supposed to stand against the spirit of oligarchy, against the big estates that undermined small proprietors and the big employ ers who oppressed the workers. Republican government in the tra dition ofJefferson and of the leaders of the French Revolution was open and honest. But then, lamented Chesterton, entered the secret society, the creation of finance and selfish interest groups. While the true Liberals thought they were building a brotherhood of all men, power secretly passed to the conspirators who used money for pri vate, not public interests. Chesterton believed that Mussolini was rebelling against this perversion of republican principles: "He had reverted to the original ideal that public life should be public; and emphasized it in the most dramatic manner by stamping on the Secret Societies as on a tangle of vipers."11 This was merely the acceptance of what Robespierre had called the civic necessity of virtue. Chesterton believed that Thomas Jefferson and the early Republicans would have understood Mussolini perfectly. Chesterton frequently could defend Italian Fascism for the above reasons, and, of course, his deep affection for Catholic culture, which he thought Mussolini was reviving, also strongly influenced his views on the matter. Yet, Chesterton never gave his imprimatur to Fascism, either as practiced in Italy or as championed in Britain. Although he could point out the positive dimensions of Mussolini's rebellion against a rotten Liberalism, he was never taken in by the Fascist corporate state. Indeed, Chesterton condemned the totali tarian, statist tendencies in Fascism from the moment they appeared. In his mind, Fascism's rebellion against secrecy led to a problem as sinister as the evil it replaced, and that was the one-party state. A similar proclivity in British politics had spawned the "party system" and Chesterton's own disaffection from Parliament. His objection to Parliament was not that it was the domain of a two-party system, consisting of brawling Tories and Liberals with concrete disagree ments, but that it only pretended to be so. The party system was a facade designed to hide the fact that power was already centralized: "It occupied a central position between the Prime Minister and the
The Appeal of Fascism 193
Leader of the Opposition; not infrequently in the form of an unknown financier who was advising them both."12 Mussolini's destruction of the secret societies and of the power of finance simply cleared the decks for a new kind of undemocratic, centralized power, only this one was more lethal in that it lacked what Chesterton called a "fixed moral principle" and was totalitarian. His position on Fascism could be summed up quite succinctly: "The whole of the real case for Fascism can be put in two words never printed in our newspapers: secret societies. The whole case against Fascism can be put in one word now never used and almost forgotten: legiti macy."13 In short, Fascism was justified in smashing a corrupted Par liament, but it was never a satisfactory political solution because it rested not on authority but only on power. Thus, to label Chesterton a fascist fellow traveler and an anti democrat is a misreading of his career and the pluralist principles upon which it was built.14 The irony here is that Chesterton criti cized Italian Fascism precisely because it was not democratic. Nor is there adequate appreciation for the fact that Chesterton was a persistent foe of British fascism. The British Union of Fascists assidu ously tried to convert Distributists to its cause. Many of the move ment's programs were close to the hearts of Chestertonians (the establishment of peasant proprietorship, the destruction of chain stores and monopolies, the elimination of what it called the "party game," functional representation, and so forth). Yet, while Chester ton was alive, the Mosleyites were unable to convince Distributists to accept their version of the corporatist state. Chesterton demon strated quite clearly that fascist government, with its insistence on the unquestioned sovereignty of the state, could never be accepted by either Distributists or Catholics, because it ultimately denied the dignity and liberty of the common man. 15 The tendency to associate Chesterton with fascism is largely the product of his relationship with Belloc and the fact that, after his death in 1936, his journal and various Distributists became increas ingly enamored of fascism, both in Italy and in Britain. Belloc was never able to bring himself to denounce Mussolini's totalitarianism, and by the late 1930s he was writing fulsomely of fascism in Italy and Spain. As late as 1939, for example, Belloc could argue that
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Mussolini's Fascists had saved Italy and the heart of Western civi lization from communism and that Mussolini, in the process, had created "for the first time within living memory a guild system."16 Chesterton's opposition to fascism rested firmly on pluralist grounds: he regarded its version of corporatism as bogus because the principle upon which it reposed was illegitimate, statist, and totali tarian. In the face of fashionable Fascism and the "toppling sim plifications of the Totalitarian State," wrote Chesterton, there was much to appreciate in liberalism and its language of liberty: The Totalitarian State is now making a clean sweep of all our old notions of liberty, even more than the French Revolution made a clean sweep of all the old ideas of loyalty. It is the Church that excommunicates; but, in the very word, implies that a communion stands open for a restored communicant. It is the State that exterminates; it is the State that abolishes absolutely and altogether; whether it is the American State abolishing beer, or the Fascist State abolishing parties, or the Hitlerite State abolishing everything but itsel£17 The British, Mosleyite version of the Fascist creed would never have appealed to Chesterton because it was, in large part, a rein carnation of the pre-1914 Right. This tradition was diametrically opposed to the anarcho-syndicalist, pluralistic pre-War legacy out of which Chesterton emerged. Like the Tory imperialists and the "Coefficients" (a "brain trust" to create an efficiently organized British empire) who gathered around the Webbs, Lord Milner, Leo Amery, and others who were the true predecessors of British fas cism, Oswald Mosley was motivated primarily by the desire for strong government and was obsessed with the idea of using experts who could streamline the administration of the state. Indeed, Mosley's main criticism of Parliament was that it was simply inefficient. The historian Henry A. Turner has called Mosley an "authoritarian mod ernizer" in a society which had "resolved unwittingly to stand on the ancient ways."18 Nothing could be further removed from the phi losophy of Chesterton, who was a warrior against modernity seek ing solutions to its evils precisely by returning to the spirit of "ancient ways."
The Appeal of Fascism 1 95
Belloc's relationship with the Latin varieties of fascism was more complicated and sympathetic than that of G. K. Chesterton. This can best be appreciated in the context of his ideas about Jews and communism. From the beginning of his journalistic career, Belloc had established himself as a critic of Jewish influence in British political and financial affairs. Both Gilbert Chesterton and Belloc believed that Jews, a "people apart" who had withstood assimilation into European national com munities, had been given an opportunity to maximize their quest for economic gain in the individualist environment fostered by the Protestant revolt. They were solvents of medieval culture and the driving force behind the rise of capitalism. The Jews were always for Chesterton and Belloc a symbol of the financial power ("usury," as they called it) that destroyed medieval (Catholic) civilization. Bel loc, however, later began to see certain connections between Jews who, he claimed, worked in secret behind the scenes and were in the habit of changing their names-and a host of evils: corruption of parliamentary politics, international finance (imperialism) , Freemasonry, and communism. Scholars recently have noted an important linkage between the conspiracy theories of British fascists and the anti-Semitism ofBel loc and the group of writers associated with his early journalistic endeavors.19 The defining issue for Belloc's and Cecil Chesterton's Eye- Witness and the later New Witness was the war against corrup tion in public life, and from the outset both claimed that Jews were a key source of this problem. Their journals highlighted the increas ing involvement of Jews in important economic and political sec tors of British life. Belloc's literary stature gave considerable weight to this campaign, and the publicity associated with what the Wit ness group called the "Jewish factor" created a rich imagery and a legend, indeed a subculture, that future British fascist groups could draw upon.20 The language and programs of the British Union of Fascists, in particular, struck a familiar chord in Distributist ears. Its message fell on intellectual soil fertilized by Belloc's conspiratorial theories, and there was significant cross-over between the two movements by the late 1930s. In addition, some have argued that the more blatant anti Semites and fascists in the 1930s who warned of an international
1 9 6 CAT H O L I C I NT ELLECTUALS A N D T H E CHALLENGE O F D E M O C RACY
Jewish-communist-Freemason plot to take over the world (an updating of that notorious forgery, The Protocols ofthe Elders ofZion) were elaborating on a set of positions already established in some detail by Belloc.21 Indeed, many of these extremists, like Belloc, were Catholics. Most disconcerting were the fascist tirades of the influential radio priest of Royal Oak, Michigan, Father Charles Coughlin. Father Coughlin shared Chesterton's and Belloc's populism and antipathy to modernity. He voiced the frustrations of a rural Ameri can mentality that could not reconcile itself with the growth of big government and monopoly capitalism. Coughlin's campaign against the New Deal, Jews, communism, and Freemasons had the impri matur of his superior and protector, Bishop Michael ]. Gallagher of Detroit. Gallagher as a young seminarian had studied in Inns bruck, where he fell under the influence of the Austrian/Vogelsang version of social Catholicism with its authoritarian, corporatist, and ideological anti-Semitic underpinnings. Coughlin's journal was the widely circulated Socialjustice Review, which provided a forum for his anti-Semitic, conspiratorial rantings. Belloc contributed a good many articles to this paper, further cementing his name to the cause of British and American fascism. Coughlin deeply appreciated Bel loc's work.22 Father Coughlin's commentaries articulated three themes which previously had been elaborated upon by Hilaire Belloc: the Jews, he asserted, were responsible for the abuses of international banking and the rise of materialistic communism; Nazism was a defensive reaction to protect Germany from an alliance between Jews and communists; and the democracies, being weak and decadent, were themselves responsible for the problems of world depression. A number ofinfluential Catholics in both Britain and America felt compelled to speak out against the association of their faith with fascism and anti-Semitism (for example, George Shuster, Father H. A. Reinhold, Donald Attwater, Father James Gillis, Dorothy Day, and Wilfrid Parsons, S .J.) , and in many instances they addressed Belloc's influence in the matter. The Catholic Associ ation for International Peace, for instance, in its pamphlet "The Church and the Jews," condemned what it called the "moderate anti-Semitism" of men like Belloc. Father Lawrason Riggs of Yale
The Appeal of Fascism 197
University's More House in his attack on a scurrilous anti-Semitic article by Father Stanislaus Hogan, O.P., given wide circulation in America, also remarked on the Belloc connection.23 Father Riggs told his readers that although Belloc was a great defender of the faith, he was "primarily an artist," whose political and economic views frequently needed correction and in many cases had caused considerable harm to the Church.24 One of the most sweeping condemnations of Father Coughlin and Catholic anti-Semitism, accompanied by a detailed scholarly analysis of the sources of such thinking (in this case Alfred Rosen berg's The Myth ofthe 20th Century), was written by George Shuster.25 He was especially concerned about the work of the Coughlin affiliated Christian Front. This organization had close ties to the Nazi-funded German-American Bund. The New York branch of the Front was headed by Marcel Honore and Walter Ogden. At one of their meetings, Shuster noted, members praised Hitler's accom plishments and recommended a wholesale massacre ofJews.26 Shus ter's attack on Father Coughlin seems to have been prompted by the desires of a committee of influential New York Catholics to disas sociate the Church from Coughlin's anti-Semitic propaganda.27 This was no easy task, as much of Father Coughlin's prestige came from his priestly office and from his habit oflacing his remarks with references from Catholic social teaching. Adding to his apparent authority was a group of Coughlinite priests who banded together under the name "Clerical Reservists of Christ the King." Some Holy Name societies, Knights of Columbus Councils, and Catholic War Vets in the New York City area also espoused his doctrines with great enthusiasm. Belloc first established a high public profile on the issue of the Jewish problem in the Eye- Witness and the New Witness. Yet long before this journalistic crusade, Belloc as a Liberal MP had sug gested that the plutocratic wire-pullers behind the scenes were Jews. In fact, Belloc's opposition to the Boer War was based, in large part, on this assumption. He believed that the Liberal Party's political fund was in the hands of certain rich men with financial stakes in South Africa, the "Rand Magnates" like Barney Barnato, who, Belloc asserted, initiated the Boer War to protect their investments.
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Belloc also saw the hand of Jews behind the Congo Reform Association, an organization formed by E. D. Morel in 1904 to force the Belgians to treat Congo natives more humanely. In a series of articles in the New Age Belloc implied that the real powers behind Morel's campaign were Jewish financiers who hoped to destroy the Belgian government's monopoly in order to make a fortune for themselves in the Congo rubber trade.28 The specter of a Jewish conspiracy also was a feature of Belloc's pre-World War I novels. Throughout Emmanuel Burden (1904), Mr. Clutterbuck's Election (1909), A Change in the Cabinet (1909), and Pongo and the Bull (1910) there lurk wealthy Jews who continually change their names, speak with heavy foreign accents, and have unsavory physical appearances (greasy curly hair, swarthy complex ions, hooked noses, and so forth). These men own important news papers and devise exploitative development schemes in India and Africa, working behind the scenes while using respectable, hard working English businessmen as fronts. They control the party sys tem through the power of bribery. In the end, Belloc's stories show how the old elites-honest, good folks with deep roots to the English soil but naive about the power of hidden money-pass from the scene. It is the men of cosmopolitan wealth who inherit the new world. The conspiracy of :finance was soon linked in Belloc's mind with that traditional enemy of Roman Catholicism, international Free masonry. Belloc began to make connections between Masonry, Jew ish associations, and anti-Catholicism in a series of articles on the infamous Ferrer affair. Francisco Ferrer Guardia was a Spanish apostate Catholic with a deep hatred of the Church who became well known as a free thinking education reformer. His goal was to liberate Spanish edu cation from the control of Catholicism and, through a curriculum of rational, scientific studies, prepare what he called "a better hu manity."29 Such ideas were considered a serious threat to Spain's tra ditional culture, one in which Church and state were intimately linked. Ferrer's educational philosophy made him sympathetic to anarchism (he called himself an acrata, a philosophical anarchist) , but he denied that he was ever a complete convert to the creed. He
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had personal affiliations with individual anarchists but apparently was not associated with them in any organizational fashion. Ferrer had also consistently condemned anarchist acts of violence. How ever, when the librarian of Ferrer's libertarian school in Barcelona, the so-called Escue/a Moderna, threw a bomb at the Spanish king and queen in May 1906, Ferrer was arrested and charged with com plicity. He was soon released due to lack of evidence. But an oppres sive environment in Spain (the government closed the Escue/a Moderna) forced Ferrer to emigrate to Paris and London, where he had contacts with the anarchist Prince Peter Kropotkin. Ferrer returned to Barcelona in the summer of 1909, just as a prolonged political crisis produced outbursts of social protest. Anar chists and members of the Radical Republican Party exhorted their followers to turn this anger against the Church, a convenient sym bol of political and economic tyranny. Matters became worse in July when the government called up reservists in Catalonia for service in an unpopular war in Morocco. In what came to be called the "Tragic Week'' (Semana Tragica) ," Barcelona was seized by the passion of a general strike which soon erupted into a spontaneous social rebel lion. Anarchists quickly claimed responsibility for the affair. The enraged lower-class rioters singled out religious property rather than the persons of clergy, government, army, the upper classes, or the economic system itsel£ Church property was targeted as a protest against the failings of the clergy to fulfill their religious and social responsibilities. 30 The government's response was extreme, and in the aftermath it undertook a witch hunt for anarchists whom it blamed for the destruction. Ferrer's educational ideas, his strong anticlericalism, and the government's frustration over his previous acquittal made him a prime target of the crackdown. Although the police had no clear evidence against him (indeed, Ferrer had opposed plans for a general strike and established himself as an outspoken critic of anar chist violence), a court martial found him guilty of having "decisively influenced" the Radical party to rebellion. He was executed in Octo ber 1909. By all accounts, this was a grave miscarriage ofjustice, and an international outcry condemning the reactionary behavior of the Spanish government soon followed. 31
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Belloc's response to these events adumbrated his reaction to the outbreak of the Spanish Civil War some twenty seven-years later. The violence against the Church was the defining issue here, and, as in 1936, he was quick to smell conspiracy. Belloc recognized that the Semana Tragica was a carefully planned attack on Church property, but he failed to appreciate the reasons behind the action. Although the rebellion had started as an antiwar protest, no military estab lishment was attacked; nor, for that matter, were banks, factories, or the homes of wealthy capitalists so hated by the laboring masses. The Radicals who directed the violence once it erupted saw the destruction of Church property as an end in itsel£ The issue, how ever, was not essentially religious but rather political and economic. Because of its special relationship with the established elites, the Spanish Church had become the symbol of privilege and oppres sion and the reviled instrument of state authority. The Spanish Catholic hierarchy was perceived as having sacrificed its spiritual obligations to the cause of conservative politics. Anticlericalism was not confined to the laboring classes. Army officers, for example, were notably passive during the attacks and Catholic bourgeois lay men failed to defend clerical property. 32 Belloc, on the other hand, had a far simpler explanation for the Barcelona uprising: the city had been ripe for a violent explosion because it was full ofJewish usurers despised by the poor. Yet in this bastion of capitalism, not a single piece of capitalist property was touched by rioters, Belloc noted, suggesting that the conspirators had diverted the destitute to a false target. Working-class alienation from the Spanish Church and the long history of anticlericalism in that country were important factors in the "Tragic Week," as they would be in the later, even more tragic events of civil war. Belloc, rather than examining the social roots of these factors, a task he undertook eagerly in analyzing institutional Catholicism at the time of the French Revolution, simply charged that the Semana Tragica resulted from a tripartite conspiracy against the faith engineered by communists, Jews, and Freemasons.33 These events, he claimed, were part of a "synchronized" action by the press and those who hated religion. As for Ferrer, Belloc had no doubt as to his guilt: "his views upon human morals in general . . .
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were such as would not be tolerated . . . in any strictly governed country, not the least of all in England."34 Belloc pointed out that Ferrer had been a high-ranking official of Grand Orient Free masonry. When Ferrer fled Spain for Paris in 1906 he made friends with the "Jew Nacquet," whose political business was to introduce divorce into the French Code of Law. In England Ferrer took up with his Bloomsbury friends, most of whom were "Dissenters of one kind or another" interested in undermining Catholicism in Spain. 35 The Freemasons rushed to Ferrer's defense, Belloc noted, and when this failed, they engineered riots all over Europe.36 Belloc gave a warning in his analysis of the Ferrer case, one that would be elaborated more fully in the Eye- Witness and New Witness and in his book The fews. The violent events in Spain in 1909 were a presage of worse to come, he claimed. The masses of Europe were utterly discontented. Their condition in crowded cities was becom ing increasingly wretched and inhumane, and they could not be expected to tolerate much longer an economic and spiritual sickness repellent to all European instinct and tradition. The Church lost its hold on these urban masses at the onset of the industrial revolution, and throughout the nineteenth century it had struggled to win them back from the grip of secret societies and men of wealth, who used the workers' hunger and thirst for social justice in the service of their own ends. Such would be the source of the inevitable outbursts of violence that would plague European society in the years ahead. Belloc possibly was correct in regarding the Semana Tragica as a turning point of sorts in Europe's political history; but it was so for reasons far different from those he recognized. The vigorous repression that followed, and the mistaken impression that the re bellion was primarily fueled by separatist aspirations, seriously crip pled the reformist efforts of Catalan politicians, who represented the vanguard of change for Spanish politics. After the crisis ended, Spanish politicians ceased to use the legislature as a tool for effect ing much-needed reform. Furthermore, the failure of the workers to achieve any semblance of representative government in Catalonia, the most industrialized section of the nation, was a major setback for the cause of Spanish democracy and would have a direct bear ing on the origins of civil war in 1936. Henceforth, Spanish workers
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turned exclusively to labor movements, not political parties, for social and economic salvation, and these functioned outside the political structure.37 Belloc's analysis of the Ferrer affair, informed chiefly by a reli gious polemical agenda, revealed his inadequacies as a commenta tor on Latin politics. As early as 1909 his writings show that he failed completely to appreciate the way in which the Spanish Church had become identified in the popular mind with defense of a hated feu dal social order, thereby fueling the intense anticlericalism of the Semana Tragica. Contrary to Belloc's arguments, the Barcelona uprising had no significant international connections. 38 The issues that inspired it were largely social and religious, and its chief objec tive was to destroy the property and wealth of the clergy. 39 The reac tionary Spanish hierarchy refused even moderate political reform lest it open the door for separation of Church and state. Pope Leo XIII's encyclical Rerum Novarum was largely ignored in Spain, its precepts seldom even discussed in high Church circles. Not sur prisingly, the clergy were frequent targets of working-class violence, since they symbolized the source of social and economic unhappiness. Hilaire Belloc's obsession with the intrigues of international Masonry and Jewish financiers increasingly blinded him to the more complex issues of class warfare that were behind the social upheavals in Spain and later in Italy. Those in his intellectual orbit manifested the same myopia. Nowhere was this better illustrated than in a major financial scandal that soon unfolded in Britain in 1912. There was a dramatic shift in the Eye- Witness's suspicions of Jews as well as parliamentary political corruption with the disclo sure of the so-called Marconi affair, discussed briefly in chapter 5 . Following this incident the editors were convinced that the "Jew ish connection'' was proven beyond all doubt. In the words of Cecil Chesterton, who coined the term "Marconi scandal" and who played a major role in exposing those involved, the event was the fulfillment of a prophecy and thus the justification of a hypothesis.40 The details of the Marconi affair were complex and need only be briefly touched on here. The British Admiralty proposed to con struct a chain of wireless radio stations throughout the Empire in order to attain instant communications with its war vessels. Nego-
The Appeal of Fascism 203
tiations for building the project were undertaken in March 1910 with Godfrey Isaacs, the managing director of the London Marconi Wireless and Telegraph Company. Godfrey was a brother of the attorney general, Sir Rufus Isaacs. In March 1912 the postmaster general, Herbert Samuel, provisionally accepted the contract. But before this decision was made public, Godfrey Isaacs travelled to the United States where he bought up the assets of a competing company and reissued the new shares for the American Marconi subsidiary at a higher cost. In April 1912 he offered shares of the American company at a reduced cost to his brother Harry Isaacs. The announcement of the British government's contract with the London Marconi company naturally would have increased the value of these stocks. Harry quickly sold his shares to his brother Rufus, who in turn offered some to the chancellor of the Exchequer, David Lloyd George. All this took place before Parliament made public its decision to give the London Marconi company the contract. Rumors and questions about ministers making money at public expense forced the government to investigate matters. In the autumn of 1912 a parliamentary select committee was charged with conduct ing an inquiry. Its report split on party lines, and the men involved essentially were cleared of any corruption charges. Cecil Chesterton in his New Witness along with Leo Maxse's National Review (a journal of the right that criticized the Conserva tive Party for its failure to entertain direct action political tactics) led the charge on what they declared was a sell-out to plutocratic inter ests. The New Witness saw a clear connection between the party sys tem and Jewish influence. The journal claimed that the peerage was a Jewish monopoly, its "alien gold" having bought the soul of the Liberal Party. The New Witness group's attacks on those implicated in the scandal were nothing short of savage. Rufus Isaacs, wrote Cecil Chesterton, was a Jew who could not be expected to under stand the subtle workings of a Christian conscience: "He is an alien, a nomad, an Asiatic, the heir of a religious and racial tradition wholly alien from ours. He is amongst us: he is not of us."41 The New Witness alleged that the Marconi affair involved others outside the country and that it was part of a wider conspiracy in interna tional finance. An important secret role, the journal asserted, was
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played by Amsterdam Jews who had created the boom in Marconi shares in the first place. 42 Cecil Chesterton spearheaded the New Witness's assault on the Marconi men, making crude references to what he called "the chosen" and "alien money-lenders." Consider able space in the paper was given over to Frank Hugh O'Donnell, an intemperate former Irish Nationalist MP whose anti-Jewish dia tribes seemed to be lifted straight from the pages of the Protocols. O'Donnell appears to have been speaking for a number of anti Semites who were beginning to establish close links to the paper and its campaign against corruption. O'Donnell's opinions were featured in a weekly column entitled "Twenty Years Later." His commen taries on the behavior of}ews in France closely resembled the arti cles by the French monarchist Charles Maurras in Action Franfaise, a proto-fascist journal which he regularly singled out for the high est praise. O'Donnell was certainly mirroring Belloc's opinions on the sub ject, for he too was an avid reader ofAction Franfaise and expressed admiration for its social, political, and economic positions. In a letter to E. S. P. Haynes, for example, Belloc wrote that Maurras was "per haps the most intelligent man of our generation."43 Belloc's enthu siasm for such people increased during the interwar years. Belloc urged his good friend Maurice Baring to become acquainted with Robert Brasillach, the French literary fascist ("we have long since seen Fascism as a poem, the very poetry of the twentieth century")44 who, along with Pierre Gaxotte, a right-wing historian known for his anti-Freemasonry vitriol, were the backbone of]e suis partout. This was a sophisticated anti-Semitic weekly review dominated by young Action Franfaise epigoni who eulogized Italian Fascism and worked toward a better understanding between France and the Nazis. Along with its attacks on communism, Belloc found the paper's campaign against Judeo-Marxists and Freemasons appeal ing. ]e suis partout, he wrote Baring, was intelligent and well writ ten, and he urged that Baring take up reading it "unless you are put off by the violence of its opinions."45 O'Donnell's strident columns in the New Witness assailed the poison of hidden conspirators in a style that even Belloc thought excessive. O'Donnell ceaselessly excoriated the Third Republic for its Marconi-type scandals, the first of which was triggered by Drey-
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fus, who, in the New Witness group's view, symbolized the inter national evil of the Marconi men. The "constant element" in the development of French Republicanism was a "Jewish Directory," "traitorous, corrupt and decadent."46 England and France were but a small part of the picture, insisted O'Donnell. Hundreds and thou sands of people in several modern countries were being "registered, marked down, tabooed, reduced to helplessness and poverty, solely through the vast organization controlled by the Jew."47 Everywhere, in the United States, England, in India and South Africa, enormous confederations of "Judean promoters and directors" were engineer ing a complex cosmopolitan plan to exploit all the world's wealth. Its victory would reveal "Le Juif Roi de I..:Epoque."48 Such crude anti-Semitic diatribes were too much even for Belloc. In a number of letters to Maurice Baring, Belloc expressed dismay at the paper's careless attacks on Jews, fearing that it could destroy the New Witnesss credibility.49 Belloc also received many letters criti cal of Cecil Chesterton's rudeness and poor editorial responsibility from his close friend and confident, E. S . P. Haynes, who himself was a source of financial support for the New Witness. Belloc re sponded apologetically, essentially agreeing with Haynes and fear ing that the public would hold him responsible for what was said in the paper. Yet it was style, not substance, with which Belloc took issue, for the New Witness, he insisted, "only goes forward by the power that truth has inherent in itself."50 Cecil Chesterton eventually was convicted of libel for his scur rilous assaults on Godfrey Isaacs in the Marconi scandal, an attack which had served to launch the New Witnesss wider campaign against international Jewry. Isaacs' civil suit greatly discredited Cecil Chesterton and his friends for their nefarious role in the Marconi affair. But in a perverse sort of way the Chesterton people saw this as a moral victory, mainly because they had caught the attention of the nation and were given a platform for their scandalmongering. Unfortunately, the damage done to the Jewish families wrongfully implicated by the New Witness group was deep and long-lasting. The whole affair contributed to the further deterioration of political decency and dialogue in Britain, exacerbating the negative climate of discourse brought on by labor unrest and the women's suffrage movement. 51
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The libel conviction by no means throttled the anti- Semitism of the Eye-witness and the New Witness. Soon thereafter the cam paign against Jews was carried over into organized group activity with the formation of the National League for Clean Government. After 1918 the movement was resurrected under the name of the "New Witness League." From the outset the League's two key :figures were Cecil Chesterton and F. Hugh O'Donnell. Chesterton was its central publicist; O'Donnell was one of the League's main speak ers and chairman of the Organizing Committee. The raison d'etre of this organization was the Marconi scandal, which for the New Witness circle represented Britain's Dreyfus affair. Although the League's main objective was to :fight corruption in Parliament, it was always assumed that this problem was part and parcel of a Jewish plot to subvert political life. As O'Donnell pointed out, the issue of clean government was interlinked with all other problems, and the constant element is the "reign of the Judean." The Jew, he wrote, ":finds everywhere material for his activity and willing flunkies for his tips and his ground floor prices. No larva can thrive and multiply except in the soil or the sediment which is its suitable environment."52 Many who joined the League were not hostile to Jews and came from all over the political spectrum-for example, the right-wing Conservative Leo Maxse supported it, as did Fred Jowett, Labour MP for Bradford West, Thomas Burt, Lib-Lab MP for Morpeth, and various radical trade union activists with syndicalist proclivities. However, there was an active core of anti-Semites from literary, political, and journalistic circles who, along with the editor of the New Witness, managed to shape the propaganda to :fit their par ticular vision. The cartoonist David Low attended one of the League's :first meetings called to expose the sale of honors and cor ruption in the House of Lords. There was much to be said about such matters, Low noted, but he quickly became uneasy and irri tated by the vague anti-Semitism that :filled the air.53 Two leading :figures of the League were Rowland Hunt, an anti Semitic Conservative MP, and Vivian Carter, editor of the Bystander. Carter voiced an ethnocentric hostility to Jews, much like that of the Chestertons and Belloc, which asserted that their cosmopolitan loyalties were incompatible with British patriotism. Carter insisted
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that Jews be prevented from changing their oriental-sounding names so they could be easily identified. She also recommended that Jews be given special sectors of the cities in which to reside, thereby preventing an unhealthy mixing of the populations. 54 The League had some successes in promoting the candidacy of independent MPs in by-elections and campaigning against what it called "place men." It raised public awareness about laws abusive of human rights, exposed food scandals, probably was partly respon sible for defeating the sterility provisions of the so-called Mental Deficiency Bill, and worked diligently against the eugenicists' cam paign for birth control. Yet even these battles were colored by tones of anti-Semitism. The New Witness, for example, asserted that the eugenicists were part of a Jewish-German conspiracy designed to decrease the British population and undermine the foundation of common morality by destroying the home.55 The League for Clean Government and the later New Witness League incorporated three dimensions of anti-Semitism that were reenacted in the British fascist movements of the interwar years: the articulation of an ethnocentric "Britain-for-the-British" idea; the specter of a politico-economic conspiracy; and the creation of a refuge for racists like O'Donnell, serving in this sense as a respectable front legitimated by the more august names of others attached to the movement.56 For these reasons, contemporary scholars of British politics and racism, in particular Kenneth Lunn and others, consider the New Witness group and the League precursors of the fascist movements of the 1930s. Indeed, Lunn has gone so far as to argue that the Distributist League of the interwar years was an extension of the League for Clean Government, since G. K. Chesterton's asso ciation claimed a common heritage and promised to continue the approach of its predecessor. 57 However, there was a marked differ ence in tone in the Distributist movement while G. K. Chesterton was involved in its activities, and nothing was ever written in G.K s Weekly that resembled the vituperative anti-Semitic diatribes of his brother's papers. During Chesterton's years at the helm the Dis tributist League did not perpetuate the Jewish conspiracy thesis, nor would it accept any affili ation with British fascist organizations. However, Kenneth Lunn makes it clear that one of the main avenues to the 1930s fascist subculture of anti-Semitism was Belloc's
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final updating of the conspiracy thesis in his book The fews (1922) . This book was nothing more than a reiteration of what Belloc al ready had written during the Eye- Witness and New Witness days (suggesting a certain continuity in thought between these formative years and the postwar period), differing only in that it incorporated the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917 in the broader context of the Jew ish problem. Belloc went to great lengths in insisting that his book was not inspired by a dislike of Jews as a people. Indeed, he dedicated the work to his Jewish secretary, Miss Ruby Goldsmith. His objective in writing the book was to alert both Jews and Gentiles to a seri ous problem and to make suggestions for avoiding a tragedy that racial anti-Semitism could produce. It was necessary to accept the fact, wrote Belloc, that the Jews were an "alien body" producing great friction within the organism in which it resided. To acquaint his readers with the "Jewish problem," Belloc outlined their rise to prominence in politics and finance. Jews had gained a monopoly in the international news media, garnered enormous power through an alliance with Freemasonry, and by the end of the century had strong representation within the governing institutions of Western Europe "fifty or one hundred fold" more than was their due in pro portion to their numbers . All this, along with Jewish imperialist conspiracies via their domination of international :finance, and the exposure of their involvement in political corruption (Dreyfus and Marconi), triggered the outbreak of late-nineteenth-century anti Semitism. The unfortunate culmination of these cosmopolitan tendencies, insisted Belloc, was Jewish control of Bolshevism. Expanding on the fact that Marx, Trotsky, and several of the prominent Bolsheviks were Jewish, Belloc asserted that Jews engineered the Russian Revo lution of 1917 and that their secret international networks were the glue holding the communist movement together throughout the world. The Russian Jews, he admitted, were possessed of a positive political ideal in communism: it was a force that could destroy the ex cesses and evils of capitalism. Jews were well suited to this task, wrote Belloc, because communism as a creed ran against the natu ral strivings of European nationalism. The Bolsheviks sought to destroy private property, and the Jews could direct this endeavor
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because they were not compromised by the sympathy of civic instinct. The Jew could destroy capitalism, the spawn of unfettered greed, because he had "neither the political instinct for the sanctity of prop erty in his national tradition nor a religious doctrine supporting and expressing such an interest."58 Jewish consciousness transcended national boundaries, since Jews did not possess the European sense of patriotism. A Jew's patriotism was of a different complexion, for he lacked traditions rooted in a common soil. Belloc hoped this problem could be resolved amicably. However, the solution required that Jews be recognized as a wholly separate nationality and treated legally as such, replete with certain rights and privileges. What worked against this, he said, was the Jew's power to conform externally to his "temporary surroundings." Throughout his career, Belloc insisted that he was not an anti Semite, a prejudice he equated with racism. The true anti-Semite, he argued, disliked or hated Jews as a people. It is important to re member that Belloc was an early critic of the Nazis, condemning their abominable and immoral persecution of Jews. He claimed that such behavior was exactly what he had warned against in his book The]ews.59 What distinguished the Nazis from Belloc was that he opposed Jews for religious and nationalistic reasons (their cosmo politan culture mitigated sentiments of patriotism), not because of their race. Belloc was legitimately horrified at the Nazis' war against the Jews. He viewed the Nazis as irrational extremists: it was not possible to appeal to a group's intelligence when their passions were moved by the far greater emotion of hatred for people as a race.60 Just because communism was under Jewish direction and is essen tially a Jewish movement, wrote Belloc, "it is not necessary to turn savagely on the whole Jewish people as the Nazis did."61 Belloc also showed scorn for English racists. For example, he called Nesta Webster's scurrilously anti-Semitic The Cause ofthe World Unrest a "lunatic book" and soundly denounced its obsessions.62 II
Belloc was an avid supporter of Mussolini from the beginning of the dictator's experiments in Fascism, primarily because he believed that
2IO CAT H O L I C I N T ELLECTUALS AND T H E CHALLENGE OF D E M O C RACY
II Duce was resurrecting an empire of Roman proportions grounded upon Catholic principles and traditions. Mussolini's mission ap peared to complement Belloc's singular idea of Catholicism as cul ture. Only on rare occasions, and then only privately, would Belloc offer a critical evaluation of Mussolini's behavior.63 As a young man, however, Belloc believed that the inspiration and power for resurrecting a Catholic Latin civilization would come from France. Writing to his wife from Sienna in 1901 while prepar ing The Path to Rome, Belloc lamented that "Italy has been dead and I have no great passion for dead and putrefying things." Yet if the French were wise and carefully avoided war, "they will lead Europe and all the Latin race will grow up in their shadow." At this early date, Belloc prophetically observed that, despite the dreary influence of effete Italian priests, the salvation of the Mediterranean would come from popular rule: The test of Italy's renovation will be the hatred of England. When you :find the English running down Italy then you may be sure she is all right. I am waiting for that day. 64 In the meantime, unlike his friend Hoffman Nickerson, who believed the troubles of the postwar years lay with democracy and the concept of egalitarianism (Nickerson thought President Roose velt embodied many of the negative attributes of both) , Belloc identified the problem as far deeper. On the most fundamental level it was rooted in the loss of religion. The real battle today, Belloc wrote Nickerson, is between the Church and those trying to destroy it. The issue "will depend largely upon the arrival or non-arrival of a man or groups of men who are prepared to make heavy sacrifices in the attempt to revive religion."65 The heroes were soon to arrive: for Belloc they were Mussolini, Salazar, Dollfus, and Franco. Belloc was convinced that there was a diplomatic conspiracy against the faith which commenced with the Versailles Peace Treaty. Belloc's analysis of the settlement sheds additional light on the rea sons for his support of Mussolini's imperialist claims. 66 In Belloc's view, Italy had been unjustly deprived of the spoils of victory after World War I by the international bankers in Paris, London, and
The Appeal of Fascism 2II
New York. Not a single colony, not a mile of the Eastern Adriatic coast was granted to Italy as payment for her considerable sacrifices. Working in tandem with the financial conspirators was the Mason ically organized, anticlerical political machinery of Europe. These forces made sure that Catholic Bavaria was separated from Austria, and they worked against the creation of a Catholic Danubian state and a Catholic Renish nation, assuring, instead, that the anti Catholic Prussia would be reinstated on the Rhine. Of the new nation states erected after the Armistice, only Czechoslovakia, claimed Belloc, was given favorable treatment, and this was because Prague was violently and cruelly anti-Catholic. On the other hand, Poland had every imaginable obstacle put in its path to nationhood, and this was due, insisted Belloc, to the fact that Poland was the bastion of Catholic culture in Eastern Europe.67 Italy's postwar international objectives, Belloc believed, were shaped by the need to overcome this anti-Catholic political and financial alliance. The first step toward this end was the creation of a strong state, and this Mus solini had accomplished by smashing a corrupted parliamentary government (putting an end to the nefarious "party system," simi lar in nature to that which plagued and perverted English politics), shutting down the conspiratorial Masonic lodges, and throttling a so-called "free press." Thereby Mussolini had laid the groundwork for a restoration of Caesarism, or, as Belloc preferred to call it, a "return to monarchy." By the late 1930s Belloc could inform his readers that Fascist Italy and Nazi Germany were two major examples of the popular return of monarchy (a force which back in 1901 he believed would be the salvation of the Mediterranean) . In his analysis, Britain's dis agreements with Germany and Italy were simply the clash between monarchy and "money power" for the soul of Europe. The new Reich and Italy had risen up to do battle on a double front, estab lishing a new corporativism against the strength of monopoly capi talism and its "twin brother," international communism. However, Belloc emphasized that there were vital differences between these neo-monarchies. The Italian variety was conducted by a man of genius who had inherited all the political talent of a special race. Mussolini lived in the "real memory" of Rome, while the German
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monarchy paraded about on an opera stage immersed in the dark ness ofTeutonic barbarism: The new Italian monarchy evokes the classics; the new German monarchy evokes Wagnerian actors, elderly and bawling in tow coloured wigs . . . . But the maj or and permanent difference between the two is in their contrasting attitude towards the reli gion that made Europe. 68 Belloc's enthusiasm for the mission of Mussolini appeared to know no bounds. Belloc and his circle could not even bring them selves to criticize publicly the Italian Fascist's anti-Jewish policies (though they had no trouble denouncing Hitler's pogroms) . The Weekly Review, successor to G.K s Weekly after Chesterton's death, insisted in the face of the obvious that the Italian pogroms should not be seen as a mere copy of German policy. Although the paper admitted that Mussolini's campaign was a cruel one, it refused to condemn him: the fact remains "that it [the Jews] is a people apart, with ideals and habits often violently opposed to the nature of its surroundings." ''Jewish energy has been responsible for a great num ber of anti-national activities-the Communist Revolution being the most notorious-and thus a country with strong national ambi tions cannot afford to harbor a Jewish population."69 Belloc's ultimate public endorsement ofltalian Fascism came in June 1939· Mussolini's dictatorship, he claimed, saved the state and the heart of civilization from breaking under the vile hand of Moscow. In the process of saving Western culture, the Italian Fascist created for the first time within living memory a guild system: " This, rather than the excess of highly centralized control, is what we ought to associate with the name of Mussolini."70 In short, dictatorship was an acceptable means for the greater purpose of preserving Catholic culture if it were carried out in the spirit of Belloc's version of Dis tributism. 71 In any case, by 1939 Belloc seems to have concluded that the enemies of the faith were so formidable that Mussolini's solu tion was the only option. Nevertheless, he did not believe that the Fascist dictatorship was intended to be permanent: "Italy is the most civilized of the European nations and civilization and despotism do
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not go well together."72 Authoritarian government was a danger ous expedient and must be short-lived. As Belloc put it to Maurice Baring, "Despotism is excellent as a sharp momentary remedy, but it is no more a permanent food than raw brandy."73 In contrast to the fawning Belloc, Chesterton tended to see Mussolini as a rather comic figure and frequently poked fun at him. It was a case of extreme "self-dramatization which causes the Fas cist to see himself as the heir of lmperial Rome," Chesterton wrote regarding the invasion of Abyssinia; possessing another nation's ter ritory was an assertion of the doctrine of force in its ugliest form. 74 Chesterton also was not especially enamored of the men on the French Right who had cast such spells over his friend Belloc. Chester ton, for example, privately deplored the defense ofMaurras in G.K s Weekly.75 G. K. Chesterton's most personal and difficult struggle with Ital ian Fascism occurred with Mussolini's invasion of Abyssinia in 1935· As opposed to his friend Belloc, Chesterton was far less certain about what the invasion represented, and he was deeply troubled by the imperialist implications of Mussolini's action and the suffering and injustice inflicted on the Abyssinians. The episode became a watershed in the history of Distributism, for it permanently divided the followers of the Chesterton and Belloc. Chesterton died before the controversy was resolved within Distributist circles, and there after the movement split apart. One group, represented by the more liberal-minded of Chesterton's followers, drifted away from G.K s Weekly. Another faction sympathetic to Belloc's increasingly extrem ist thinking endorsed a radically right-wing approach to politics and economic issues. Many became fascists and fellow travelers. This latter group, with Belloc's support, took control of G.K s Weekly in August 1937 and renamed it the Weekly Review in March 1938. Belloc had no doubt about the meaning ofMussolini's Abyssin ian adventure. He wrote to Chesterton that the American-led move against Italy represented "the conspiracy" in action: It is an error to exaggerate the importance of the Masonic orga nization. It is a much bigger error to be as ignorant of it as our people are. There are more Masons in America than in all the
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rest of the world. The Lodges all over resent their suppression by Mussolini and hate the growth of a new and strong Catholic power.76 Belloc publicly stated his analysis of the Abyssinian invasion in G.K s Weekly in December 1935. A strong Catholic power in the Mediterranean was a clear military threat to Britain, he argued, and this could explain the Foreign Office's opposition to the Italians. But this was only one part of an anti-Catholic alliance poised against Mussolini, claimed Belloc, the most highly organized element being the communist movement led by intelligent and active Jews who work from Moscow. The third component, of course, was inter national Freemasonry, whose natural antipathy was increased by the emergence of a new powerful Catholic nation: "Wherever the Catholic Church is powerful masonry becomes the organization or caucus directing the political forces which aim at a destruction of a Catholic society."77 The invasion of Abyssinia, for Belloc, was simply Mussolini's revenge for the slights of the Versailles peace settlement: "What the Italians want is a country in which to invest and to exploit such as France and England have; they were cheated out ofit after the War and have been angry since."78 The outrage expressed by the so-called democratic countries was sheer hypocrisy, said Belloc, an "odious Puritan itch for mixing up ordinary policy with morals,"79 since the Italians merely were doing what Britain, France, and others had done in the previous century. In this case, however, the Italians were motivated by more than the cash nexus of economic imperialism. Mussolini was carrying forward his Catholic cultural mission, namely, converting the barbarian to Christianity. Talk of an Abys sinian "nation" was nothing more than political propaganda pre ceding from the Jews of London and New York. The people of Abyssinia, Belloc wrote his son, "are a mass of more or less barbaric tribes, slave-owning and slave raiding." They certainly do not under stand or feel patriotism; it is rather "a feeling that they do not want work and worry and organization."80 These comments were in stark contrast to what Chesterton and Belloc had said about the natives of South Africa who had suffered the blows of British imperial
The Appeal of Fascism 215
aggression during the Boer War. Was Belloc applying a double stan dard in his analysis of European imperialism? Was Mussolini's imperialist adventure different because it was allegedly driven by Catholic ideals? Those who supported Belloc's position on Abyssinia got the upper hand in the editorial room of G.K s Weekly. Chesterton him self noted that he did not agree with these people, but in the spirit of openness that governed his paper, he had always permitted them to express their differences. 81 The faction that shaped the journal's posture on the Abyssinian affair-an element that closely corresponded to what Donald Att water appropriately labeled the "Latinophiles"82-asserted that Mus solini had been coerced into invading Africa by the machinations of international capitalism. Gregory Macdonald, for instance, main tained that Mussolini was in a desperate race against a consortium of New York-London-Paris financiers who were trying to gain con trol over the mineral riches of Abyssinia before he did. 83 Essentially, the Latinophiles placed the Abyssinian campaign in the context of a conspiracy of international moneylenders to undermine Italian financial independence by forcing the country off the gold standard. An important step in the "Money Power's" goal of monopolizing international wealth was to make the major European economies dependent upon American finance. At times this could be done by issuing special loans calculated to draw the recipient closer into the clutches of Wall Street. Such had been the case with Britain when she had been extended credit in the sterling crisis of 1931 and forced off the gold standard due to pressures from American moneylend ers (of course the Latinophiles always assumed that these people were Jews) . Now an assault was underway against those states that had maintained their financial independence. In a series of articles in G.Ks Weekly concerning the workings of the "international credit system," Gregory Macdonald and C. Feath erstone Hammond argued that the Abyssinian invasion was the result of Mussolini's efforts to break through this financial blockade by obtaining raw materials outside the sterling market and the capi talist oil monopoly. These journalists criticized the imposition of sanc tions on Italy. They were convinced that it represented a political
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extension of the "Money Power's" assault on the gold bloc nations. Macdonald reasoned that the various proposals for an international boycott ofltalian products were simply a ploy to make Italy lose gold reserves by forcing it to pay in gold for imports. Instead, he and Mr. Hammond proposed a wider solution to the Abyssinian problem which was designed to counterattack the conspiracy ofinternational financiers. Rather than supporting sanctions against Italy, which only favored Wall Street's money conspiracy, they called for an inter national conference to settle the outstanding European debt, cur rency, and trade problems. Macdonald hoped that such a conference would promulgate plans for the free distribution of raw materials, since it was Italy's need for resources that prompted the Abyssinian crisis in the first place. 84 Such journalistic wishful thinking, uncom fortably close to Mussolini's own justification for the campaign, was thought sufficient to preclude Italian imperialist claims in Africa. Another facet of the Latinophile thesis was that Mussolini was on a mission for higher civilization; the invasion was prompted by the duty to bring a more wholesome Christian way of life to be nighted Africans. 85 This was an argument given prominence by the Catholic writer Evelyn Waugh. Although few contemporaries took Waugh's analysis of the Abyssinian conflict seriously (a recent scholar considered his account of the war so "provably inaccurate" and "openly biased in favour ofltaly that his testimony could not be taken as any more factual than his very entertaining novels"), 86 it was given a highly positive profile in Douglas Woodruff's The Tablet and the Catholic Herald. Waugh wrote that Abyssinia was so depraved and worthless that Italy had a Christian mission to conquer the land, thereby bringing a higher culture to its barbarous people. 87 A number of Distributists vehemently denounced Mussolini's imperialist behavior as a case of unprovoked aggression akin to Britain's deplorable action in the Boer War. Chesterton took a middle path on the issue, condemning Mussolini's behavior as a throwback to the discredited ways of the nineteenth century. 88 I1 Duce, he wrote, was a reactionary in so far as he "thinks that whatever Pal merston thought good for England, or Bismarck thought good for Germany, will naturally be good for Italy . . . he thinks patriotism involves imperialism." Chesterton's position turned on what he
The Appeal of Fascism 217
called "the whole matter of the relapse." "The instant immediate effect, at this moment, of ltaly resuming the old attack on niggers, is England and America resuming an old attack on dagoes. All this amounts to a shrinking back into nationalism in the narrowest sense."89 Yet, wrote Chesterton, one should not single out the Ital ian campaign as blind barbarism, for it must be seen as atavistic, part and parcel of an imperialism practiced by all the major powers at the end of the previous century. The more moderate, liberal Distributists expressed shock at the Latinophile thesis (which appeared sufficiently pro-fascist to win praise from Ezra Pound) and demanded an adamant denunciation of Mussolini. Even Chesterton's criticism was not strong enough medicine for this group, since it lacked the hard, satirical edge of his earlier pro-Boer campaign. Maurice Reckitt was so upset with the editorial positions of G.K s Weekly that he privately wrote Chester ton to say that he was prepared to resign from the paper's board of directors. Chesterton responded by explaining that he had been out of town when the crisis broke and urged Reckitt to hold off until he had time to issue a complete statement on the affair. Between the two of us, wrote Chesterton, "I do think myself that there ought to have been a more definitive condemnation of the attack on Abyssinia."90 A major figure in the Distributist movement, Archie Currie, along with Conrad Bonacina, deputy chairman of the Distributist League, publicly attacked the Week!ys editorial line and lamented the fact that Chesterton's response lacked the fury of the Boer War days. What was the "black and special sin," asked Currie, "that these wretched people have committed alone of all the nations in all his tory, that the last champion of liberty should yawn politely at the spectacle of their enslavement?"91 Currie's comments were a blow to Chesterton, which he felt personally. Chesterton pointed out that he sympathized with his critics, and in G.Ks Weekly he denounced what he called "the return of conquest," whether it be in the form of an armed Italian or an English capitalist acting for an American company that was secretly buying up Abyssinia. Although the latter was more insidious and dangerous than the soldier, both were contemptible and deserved condemnation.92 We hold the aggression ofltaly, wrote Chesterton,
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"every bit as abominable and indefensible as all aggression in Africa." But it was important to keep the regrettable Abyssinian escapade in the proper perspective, namely, that of the evils of international finance in which Britain herself had a large share.93 None of this was enough to mollify the liberal Distributists. As Bonacina put it, they agreed with what Chesterton said but were unsatisfied with what was not said. In the case of Abyssinia the sol dier himself was tainted by the banker, for he was behaving as the :financier's best friend. Mussolini was motivated by the claims of glory and :finance: nothing will convince me, said Bonacina, "that Prussianism suddenly loses its savour ofiniquity, just because it finds a Latin practitioner."94 The Abyssinian crisis and Chesterton's uninspired criticism of Italian imperialism created a deep :fissure in Distributist ranks.95 this :fissure was only deepened following Chesterton's untimely death in June 1936. Gregory Macdonald has spoken and written about the power struggles behind the scenes of G.K s Weekly and the League. The public criticism by the Currie faction, he revealed, greatly troubled Chesterton, caused an explosion of anger within G.K s Weekly, and destroyed a healthy equilibrium between diverse groups of opin ions.96 Macdonald was convinced that the liberal Distributists were being manipulated by communists, and that the refusal of the G.K s Weekly to go along with the Left on an anti-fascist campaign (he says that the paper recognized Marxism and Nazism as two aspects of the Hegelian exaltation of the state) led to the false accusation that the paper was fascist.97 For Macdonald and the right-wing Distributists, the League of Nation's criticism of Mussolini and especially the British and American denunciations of the Abyssinian invasion were an integral part of the Left's efforts to remake the cul tural landscape of Europe. After Chesterton's death the Distributist movement broke apart along liberal and reactionary lines. The Latinophiles gained control of the newspaper, and from this point on there was a steady drift into the world of fascists and fellow-travelers. 98 The Weekly Review, successor to G.K s Weekly, upheld what could be called a philo fascist line in matters relating to international affairs, and a num-
The Appeal of Fascism 21 9
her of its leading writers had associations with British fascist orga nizations. 99 The paper provided its readers with an obsessive screed of anti-communist, anti-Jewish commentaries that disgraced the legacy of G. K. Chesterton's journalism. The association of Chester ton's name with the Weekly Review has had the unfortunate effect of linking his career with the extreme right and fascist fellow travelers. One of Britain's better-known fascists, A. K. Chesterton, wrote regular columns in the Weekly Review urging a return to a guild society; but unlike his cousin, G. K. Chesterton, he called for a dictator to establish the corporate state. Maurice Reckitt captured the tragedy of these events best when he wrote that with the death of the author of Outline of Sanity, Distributism, now also bereft of sanity, died too: "When England's greatest modern democrat laid down the flaming torch he held aloft through so long a night, the movement grouped round him spluttered out as a damp squib mid the showy and mechanical fire works of Fascism."100 After Chesterton's death, Belloc tried to fill in as editor of G.K s Weekly and the Weekly Review, but he soon left these journals to join forces with a number of other right-wing English writers who em braced fascism so as a suitable ally against the danger of interna tional communism. Belloc had an important influence on such people. His ideas on the Jewish problem, Latin fascism, and the unholy alliance between Jews, communism, and Freemasonry stretched well beyond immediate Distributist circles. What could be called the "Bellocian line" on such issues seemed to be echoed in a variety of publications of the right, such as Lady Houston's Saturday Review, the London Mercury under the editorship ofJohn Squire, Jerrold's English Review, Seward Collins' The American Review, and the two Catholic journals, the Tablet under Woodruff and the Catholic Herald. The group of writers associated with the January Club, discussed at more length in chapter 12, also expressed an anti-Semitic, pro-fascist sociopolitical vision that was inspired by Belloc's writings.
C HAPT E R 9
Early Catholic Critics of Fascism
he Latinophiles' response to Mussolini stands in sharp con trast to that of a small number of liberal Catholics, especially Italians and Germans who felt the boot of fascist terrorism firsthand. They gave Mussolini's corporativism a close critical analy sis, and their conclusions were very different indeed from those of Belloc's circle. As early as 1926, for instance, A. Grandi wrote a harsh critique of the Italian version of corporatism in the Catholic weekly Cronaca sociale d'Italia. Grandi noted that Rerum Novarum and every Catholic political philosopher from Ketteler to La Tour du Pin had insisted that Catholic corporatism must repose on the fun damental principles of freedom for individuals, free elections, and guild autonomy from the state. Not a single one of these principles was upheld by Fascist corporativism.1 Drawing extensively from Quadragesimo Anno, an updating of Rerum Novarum by Pope Pius XI drafted in 1931 and largely ignored by Belloc and his circle, the liberal Catholics examined how Italian Fascism compared in theory and practice to the corporatism out lined in the labor encyclicals. Their ultimate criticism of Mussolini's Fascism was essentially the same as G. K. Chesterton's: its excessive bureaucratism designed to centralize total power in the state was in defiance of natural law. Referring to the Fascist political program, Pope Pius XI warned:
T
The new syndical and corporative organization tends to have an excessively bureaucratic and political character . . . and it ends in serving particular political aims rather than contributing to the initiation and promotion of a better social order. 2 220
Early Catholic Critics of Fascism 221
A central argument of Quadragesimo Anno was that the true purpose of social activity was to help individual members of the cor porate body, never to destroy or absorb them. Barbara Ward, trans lator of the writings of the Italian politician and sociologist Father Don Luigi Sturzo, echoed Grandi's critique of Fascism when she claimed in 1939 that Mussolini's state-forged, state-imposed, and state-controlled corporatism "bears as much resemblance to the Catholic ideal of an organic society as does a lath-and-canvas pan tomime oak to a living tree."3 An essential tenet of the Catholic notion of a just society, Ward emphasized, was the sanctity of the human personality. Both state and society must exist for the sake of the individual (a central point in Chesterton's attack on collec tivism) . Yet to be truly human the individual requires freedom, and the basic safeguard of such liberty is the right to possess private property: Fascism claimed rights of state over individual rights. The highly influential American Benedictine educator Father Virgil Michel, an advocate of Distributism, editor of Orate Fratres, and founder of the American liturgical movement, also condemned Italian corporativism on fundamentally Chestertonian principles. In the totalitarian states, he wrote, autonomy and the power of self determination are taken away from individuals and small groups and centered more and more in larger units, ultimately in the one all embracing society of the state. In a true corporative order, on the other hand, power would devolve to smaller units, the larger group merely safeguarding the autonomy of the small. 4 In any case, wrote Michel, reiterating what both Chesterton and Belloc had always stressed, the essential prerequisite for regenerating the social order is not the establishment of any specific political or economic struc ture, but rather a "change of heart," a return to the Christian spirit of the Gospels. Ultimately, it is the spirit behind the institutions that will give shape to the social order. This was absent in Mus solini's Italy. Ironically, perhaps the most incisive critique of Italian corpo rativism along the lines of Catholic social principles came from the German economist Wilhelm Ropke, himself not a Catholic. 5 Ropke was startled at the general lack of analysis-Catholic or otherwise of the Italian corporate state. Outside Marxist circles, virtually no
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one had undertaken a serious study of the documents ofltalian cor porativism. At the London International Studies Conference in 1933, for example, at which Italian economic theory and practice were discussed with representatives of Mussolini's government, not a single person questioned whether such a thing as the corporozione actually existed. In fact, noted Ropke, fascist economics escapes sci entific analysis altogether because free discussion and inquiry are not allowed in the nations that embrace it.6 Thus, he asserted, there "is perhaps no other sort of literature containing so high a percentage of worthless trash."7 However, since Italian Fascism was monopo listic, interventionist, and totalitarian, its version of the corporate state was fundamentally incompatible with the Catholic teachings on the virtues of the medieval corporative order. In Fascism, claimed Ropke, it is not the state that is "corporativo" but the corporation that is "statale." As such, the state strangles spontaneity and indi vidual creativity. Yet the Fascist state is more than window dressing. It is rather a mechanism for achieving three purposes: it serves a po litical function by organizing the national economy so it can be pen etrated by Fascist control; it restricts free enterprise so as to facilitate the growth of a command economy; and, thirdly, it regiments soci ety so it can be manipulated more rationally by a totalitarian dicta tor. The only way to fully appreciate the profound incompatibilities between Fascism and the economics of modern Catholicism, em phasized Ropke, was to consult Pope Pius XI's Quadragesimo Anno. 8 Indeed, there was hardly a single Italian Fascist institution that did not seek to absorb the individual into the clutches of state bureaucracy. In this sense, Fascist corporativism was the very reverse of Catholic corporate thinking: Mussolini intended the corporations to be instruments for maximizing the control of his state. To Leo XIII their main value was the opposite, namely, to serve as a brake on the two chief threats to Christian freedom: unrestricted capi talism and excessive interference by the state.9 This also was a dis tinction emphasized by Pope Pius in Quadragesimo Anno. The eminent Catholic historian D. A. Binchy, who wrote a seminal study in 1941 of church-state relations in Mussolini's Italy, noted the singular failure of many Catholic publications to analyze critically the programs of Mussolini's Fascists. For instance, the
Early Catholic Critics of Fascism 223
London Tablet's assertion that the Italian corporate state was "re covering the system traditional to Catholic Europe" and its claim that there were parallels between Fascist corporations and the self governing professions in Britain revealed, suggested Binchy, that the writer simply knew nothing about the Italian system, or, even worse, was advancing some political agenda. 10 The most knowledgeable Catholic source of information about Mussolini's corporatism was a priest who personally experienced its violent birth and suffered dearly from its excesses. This was the scholar-politician Father Don Luigi Sturzo. Founder of the Popular Party (Partito Popolare), out of which emerged the Italian Chris tian Democrats, Sturzo was Fascism's fiercest critic. In May 1924 Mussolini personally forced Sturzo to resign as General Secretary of the Popular Party, and after persistent harassment by the secret police he was eventually driven into exile.11 After Sturzo's departure from politics, the democratic Popular Party, which had resisted Mussolini steadfastly in Parliament, split into factions, and the Fas cists began a program of systematic violence against Catholic clergy, institutions, and lay organizations throughout the country. Don Luigi Sturzo initially took refuge in England, where he received a cool welcome from right-wing Catholics. Broken in health, Sturzo had the good fortune of being rescued from the German bombing of London in 1941; a poor Sicilian worker from America brought him to Brooklyn, where he took up residence in a back room among the poor. A committee of prominent Catholics led by Father H. A. Reinhold, a refugee from Nazi Germany who, like Sturzo, had also been victimized by Catholic conservatives, con vinced the Bishop of St. Augustine to take in the Italian priest.12 Sturzo wrote regularly for French Catholic journals and the Com monweal, the Dublin Review, Black.friars, and Dorothy Day's Catho lic Worker. Sturzo quickly established an international reputation as a historical sociologist. But he was given little space and attention in the conservative American and English Catholic media. Hilaire Belloc, who by the 1930s was recognized as the best-known and most influential Catholic writer in the English language, 13 chose to ignore Sturzo for the most part, and what little attention he did give the Italian priest was mostly negative. Francesco Saverio Nitti,
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for example, a pioneering scholar of modern Catholic social phi losophy who served as prime minister ofl taly from 1919 to 1920 and, like Sturzo, was forced to flee the country, wrote Don Luigi from Zurich in March 1925: "Who is this journalist Belloc who has writ ten so many stupidities about you, about freedom and about fascism. He must be an ignorant swindler or at the very least a person of re pugnant cynicism."14 Belloc's response to Sturzo might initially seem puzzling, since the Popular Party pursued essentially a Distributist program. But, as earlier chapters make clear, Belloc by the 1930s was consumed with the fear of international Marxism and what he perceived to be the insidious plans ofJews and Freemasons. To his way of think ing, Mussolini provided the only hope for rolling back this tripar tite threat to Christian civilization. Sturzo's commentaries only served to weaken "Rome's mission'' to resurrect a Christian civi lization in the Mediterranean. From Catholics who shared Belloc's thinking on the matter, Sturzo suffered the same fate as his refugee friend and fellow liturgist, H. A. Reinhold. Both were targeted by conservative British and American Catholics as dangerous leftists and denounced for disloyalty to the tribe. 15 Dorothy Day, for in stance, claimed that even mentioning Sturzo's name in some Catho lic circles during the 1930s was sufficient to bring down upon one the charge of being a communist.16 In the spirit of the Leonine encyclicals, Don Luigi Sturzo's life long political mission was to harmonize Christian teachings with democracy. As opposed to most Catholic intellectuals and clergy men, Sturzo, who for :fifteen years was the mayor of Caltagirone in Sicily, had a long and distinguished career as a social and political activist. His political experiences were brutal to the extreme. The obstacles to carrying the torch of democracy in Fascist Italy were a far cry from the frustrations of political reformers in countries with a long tradition of freedom and political pluralism. Unlike Belloc, however, Sturzo never gave up on the system of democracy. Sturzo's positive approach to political problems owed much to his teacher Giuseppe Toniolo, an apostle of Christian democracy, an eminent professor of political economy at the University of Pisa, and a major collaborator in the preparation of Rerum Novarum.
Early Catholic Critics of Fascism 225
Under Toniolo's inspiration, Sturzo did extensive research on Marx ism, and his voluminous writings on the sociology of knowledge reveal a kinship with the thinking of Marx, Emile Durkheim, Max Weber, and Karl Manheim. Ultimately Sturzo came to believe that the historical process was fueled by a dialectic between conservative and progressive forces-an ongoing struggle in which, despite set backs, the rational and the good would endure.17 The sociologist Nicholas Timasheff, who knew Sturzo well during his stay at Ford ham University, has described his sociology as essentially "synthetic" with an inclination toward personalism. This is reflected in Sturzo's refusal to recognize society as legitimate outside or above the indi vidual personality: society is a sum total of its individual parts, yet a person cannot act without membership in some organization which he himself must form and control.18 Sturzo's political objective was twofold. In the spirit of the papal labor encyclicals he called for an improvement of social conditions and, closely linked to this, the participation of the masses in the life of the nation. This required an awakening of popular consciousness that went beyond merely social and political levels. Like those involved in the British-American liturgical movement, Sturzo rec ognized that real social reform had to spring from a religious insight that accepted the individual personality as the transcendent core of all social action. This insight informed Sturzo's vision as a historical sociologist, which was uniquely Catholic and at variance with mainstream so ciological thinking. It asserted that the spiritual quest was every bit as intrinsic to human needs as were economic drives. Sturzo's posi tion dovetailed with the sociological thinking of the liturgists in the sense that he believed that civilization could achieve a happy equi librium only by integrating the natural, humanistic world with the force of grace. This demanded a "re-enchantment" of the universe, a transmutation of values with Christ the divine being brought back into the process of history. Sturzo's sociology also was shaped by his personal involvement in the rough-and-tumble of Italian provincial politics. While a young Sicilian priest and advocate of radical agrarian reforms, he led a three-month strike of eighty thousand peasants until they reached
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a satisfactory settlement with landlords. Sturzo was an advocate of what he defined as "Popularism," a call for radical reconstruction of the capitalist system in which property would be widely distrib uted and property-owners would commit themselves to use it in a socially responsible manner.19 He also was a firm believer in a co partnership between capital and labor, and these notions became important platforms in the political movement that centered on the Italian Popular Party. Sturzo's radical agrarian ideas, especially his advocacy of the expropriation ofland for destitute peasants, brought accusations that he was a socialist. This was a fate he shared with his radical prede cessors Bishop Ketteler and Cardinal Manning. Of course, like Ket teler and Manning, Sturzo was no socialist, for he believed in the sanctity of private property. The goal of his Popular Party was to encourage the Distributist ideal of a politically decentralized nation of small proprietors. The party demanded government compen sation for landlords whose excess property would be redistributed to the needy.2° Furthermore, like the Distributists, Sturzo believed in the efficacy of free enterprise. His reform plan called for a "voca tional corporatism," a fraternal and equal collaboration between capital and labor. The function of the state was to oversee this enter prise, protecting the rights and interests of each partner but never interfering in their internal governance. 21 Sturzo's career as a young priest in Sicily and as mayor of Calta girone had convinced him that the social evils he hoped to overcome on the local level had their roots in the activity of the Italian national state. Therefore, he concluded, it became a pragmatic and moral im perative to use the state as the instrument for change, since Chris tian teaching emphasized that maintaining the public order was a first objective, indeed the raison d'etre, of government. To accom plish this in Italy, however, would mean overcoming the alienation of Church and state that had developed out of the Risorgimento and the occupation of Rome by the national army. Italian unification was carried out from above-not from within the context of an ideal ized confederation of states-through the power of the kingdom of Piedmont. The system imposed on Italy's varied regions and cul tures was a unitary one, grafted from British and French experiences
Early Catholic Critics of Fascism 227
and forged on wholly political fixtures without well-defined social and economic underpinnings. Following the unification of ltaly the Italian Church went into political isolation. It ultimately forbad Catholics to become involved in the political process. This policy was known as the non-expedite (political participation "is not expedient"), and as a result, Catholic action in Italy permeated social and cultural life independent of politics. Sturzo played a major role in convincing the Vatican to lift the prohibition against lay political abstentionism, for he believed that the political process was the only means ofintegrating the state with the diverse social, cultural, and economic traditions of regional Italy. Only then, after establishing a rapport with the citizenry, could the government formulate realistic reform programs for rectifying the social and economic ills of the nation. Within a month after the revocation of the non-expedite, Sturzo founded the Popular Party (January 1919). The driving purpose of the Popular Party was to overcome the alienation and bureaucratic distance between state and people, thereby bringing to completion the Risorgimento along the principles of a healthy pluralism. In order to protect Italy's rich regional traditions and to expand the democratic process, Sturzo's party called for par liamentary reform through proportional representation, votes for women, and various legislative, judicial, and labor reforms designed to encourage the expression of diverse national interests. It also hoped to improve the conditions of the working class and to pro mote the popular ownership of private property. Many Americans who studied Sturzo have believed that his ideas complemented the political vision of Jeffersonian democracy. Like Jefferson, Sturzo appreciated the vitalism that sprang from a decentralized political order. The manifesto of his Popular Party, published in January 1919, not only reflected the sentiments of Thomas Jefferson but equally could have been drafted by the English pluralists, a tradition that molded the political liberalism of G. K. Chesterton: For a centralizing state, seeking to restrict all organizing powers and all civic and individual activities, we would substitute, on
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constitutional grounds, a state . . . respectful of the natural cen ters and organisms-the family, occupational groups, townships, communes-giving way before the rights of human personality and encouraging its initiatives.22 Unlike Hilaire Belloc, who veered from liberalism to authori tarian integral Catholicism, Don Luigi Sturzo stands firmly in a tra dition that embraces the political principles of Ozanam, Ketteler, Manning, Pope Leo XIII, and finally Chesterton. Like them, he saw no reason why Catholic theology was incompatible with liberal democracy. The Church, Sturzo emphasized, is indifferent to politi cal form so long as the imperatives of morality and religion are respected. Sturzo knew from personal experience that Mussolini's Fascist regime did not pass this basic test. But democracy-the Anglo-Saxon liberal/pluralistic variety-had revealed a capacity to govern justly by protecting the moral and religious spheres of the community. It was upon the principles of liberal democracy that Sturzo spoke out against Mussolini's Fascism. From the outset, Sturzo pointed out to his constituents that the "Law of 1926" (also known as the "Rocco Law," since it was drafted by Mussolini's minister of justice, Alfredo Rocco), which abolished the right to strike and established compulsory procedures for settling labor disputes, was a tool of totalitarian rule since it only recognized the legality of Fas cist trade unions. (It is interesting to recall that Belloc condemned similar ideas of compulsory labor arbitration in Britain during the pre-World War I labor disputes.) The secretaries of each union, who were given the power to settle labor disputes, were not elected by union members but were rather official appointees of the state. The so-called corporations in Mussolini's Italy were constructed upon Fascist syndicates. The syndicates represented employers, workers, and state officials and met regularly under the supervision of Mussolini. All delegates to the syndicates, however, were hand picked by the government, and the entire setup was ultimately under the control of I1 Duce himsel£ In short, the syndicates were monopo lies of the state, a fact to which Pius XI referred in Quadragesimo Anno. This was far removed from the corporatism discussed in Rerum
Early Catholic Critics of Fascism 229
Novarum, which stressed the principle of autonomy for the guilds. Catholic corporate thinkers insisted that each syndicate enjoy free dom and freely elect representatives to a national corporative council. Sturzo's "hands-on" views of the real character of Fascist cor poratism were corroborated by various disinterested journalistic and academic sources to which any well-read, non-Italian Catholic had access. For example, an independent scholarly analysis of the Ital ian political system was undertaken by Carl T. Schmidt, a lecturer in economics at Columbia University. Having written an impressive book on Italian agricultural programs, Schmidt was awarded a Social Science Research Council Fellowship in 1935 in order to study corporative policy in Italy. His The Corporative State in Action: Italy under Fascism (1939) laid bare the hollowness of Mussolini's claims to have established a society along lines set forth by the papal labor encyclicals and the programs of the Distributist movement. Schmidt showed that the Fascists, contrary to their claims of making Italy safe from anarchy and Bolshevism, were really wag ing war on liberalism and democracy. In this respect they were "car rying on the old battle of privileged groups against the masses of their countrymen."23 To accomplish their objectives, the Fascists had to destroy institutions that served the common man, in particular, the Italian labor movement. With the creation of the Fascist syn dicates in 1926, ushered in by strike-breaking Blackshirt squad rists who crushed both socialist and Catholic unions, Mussolini had achieved this goal. As Sturzo had pointed out as early as 1926, Schmidt noted that the twenty-two "corporations" that emerged from such syndicates were composed of employers and party officials selected by the Fascist Party. These were tools for binding the Ital ian workers firmly to their employers, and beyond that, to the politi cal chiefs of the state. In a phrase that could have been penned by the author of The Servile State, Schmidt asserted that Mussolini's corporations were "the ball and chain that reduces wage-earners to helplessness, making them into passive raw materials for the 'higher' purposes of the nation."24 Schmidt's research also exposed the fraudulence of Fascist agrar ian reform. Mussolini's highly publicized land reclamation schemes, largely underwritten by public funds, had provided next to nothing
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for the rural masses they were touted to benefit. Despite the claims by Fascist politicians that landless peasants would be given a greater share in ownership, the real beneficiaries were large landowners. Schmidt's studies showed that after 1926, during the very years when the regime was supposedly strengthening small proprietors, there was a systematic elimination of independent farmers, the number of "operating owners" having fallen by nearly 750 , 0 0 0 from 1921 through 1936. Yet, at the same time, the number of cash-and-share tenants and sharecroppers increased by l.2 million.25 Schmidt con cluded that when stripped ofits "spiritual" and anti-Marxist rhetoric, the real purpose of the Fascist corporations was to make Italy safe for the traditional ruling elites.26 These assessments flew in the face of pronouncements by con servative, right-wing Catholics such as Minister ofJustice Rocco and the clerico-fascists who persistently drew parallels between Catholic corporatism and Mussolini's programs. The Fascist press naturally dismissed the pope's criticism of their corporatism. Mus solini's brother, Arnaldo, declared that the regime did not need Pius's imprimatur anyway. On the other hand, too many Italian Catholics overlooked the pope's criticisms and even tried to show that Quadragesimo Anno supported the basic tenants of Fascist cor porativism in that it, as well as Mussolini, weighed in against Marx ism, laissez-faire economics, and liberalism.27 Much like Belloc and his circle, the Italian Catholic publicists simply assumed that the Fascist order was grounded on ethical principles and thereafter ig nored the large body of Catholic social doctrine against which Mus solini's behavior should have been judged. Mussolini himself was a far cry from the defender of religion that his Catholic admirers made him out to be. In fact, it was always difficult for 11 Duce to contain his lifelong animus toward the Church, 28 and after the Lateran treaties, which forged his oppor tunistic alliance with the Vatican, he would occasionally, in public forums, lapse into vitriolic anti-Catholic diatribes. The philo-fascist Catholics never seemed to notice. Only three months after signing the 1929 concordat, for example, Mussoline announced in the Cham ber of Deputies that in Fascist Italy the Church was neither sover eign nor free. Christianity would have found its grave ages ago,
Early Catholic Critics of Fascism 231
"leaving no trace" of its existence, had it remained in Palestine. It was Rome, said Mussolini, that made the Church Catholic. As for the recently concluded Lateran agreements, they had not "resur rected the temporal power of the popes," but merely left the papacy "enough territory to bury its corpse."29 Mussolini for the most part was able to conceal this hatred for the Church from public view, though his anticlericalism was always made clear to high-ranking Fascist functionaries, whom he allowed to attack the Church with impunity. 30 Sturzo's analysis of Mussolini and Fascism seems to have been shared by only a minority of British and American Catholic publi cations. Journals and associations that were particularly concerned about industrial and social problems and were well-informed about the message of the social encyclicals tended to be highly critical of Italian Fascism. Those Catholics supportive of Mussolini, on the other hand, generally paid little attention to the labor encyclicals or were woefully ignorant of them. 31 Catholics concerned with social justice had a better understanding of Marxism than the philo-fascist Catholics; they realized that its appeal to the laboring population had much to do with the Church's failure to pursue its mission of social deaconry. Consequently, their energies focused on what should be done to mitigate the conditions that made revolutionary social ism attractive to workers in the first place. These Catholics certainly were critical of communism, for the same reasons that moved con servative Catholics, but their approach to the problem was more bal anced, firmly grounded sociologically, and thus more analytical; it was not driven by the impulse of a crusade. 32 What separated them politically from their co-religionists on the right was their recogni tion that Fascism was every bit as evil as Mar:xism.33 Perhaps the most outspoken and ground-breaking American critic of Mussolini was Father James M. Gillis, editor of the Paulist Fathers' Catholic World, a journal intended for Catholic intellectuals. Father Gillis's journal criticized Mussolini and Fascism on con servative grounds, founded in large part on Gillis's nineteenth century belief in individualism. In many respects, Gillis would have found comfort in the company of Chesterton and the English plu ralists, for he voiced a strong objection to big government, an evil
23 2 CATHOLIC I N T E LLECTUALS A N D T H E CHALLENGE O F D E M O C RACY
he called "statism." Father Gillis's editorial columns supported Catholic moral theology and the integrity of the family, defended the Church against persecution, and expressed a firm belief in the fundamental compatibility between American democratic princi ples and Catholicism. In the view of his most recent biographer, Father Gillis saw himself as a conservative guardian of the nation against those who ignored President Lincoln's dictum "government by the people."34 Yet for years Gillis remained a lonely voice of Catholic outrage against Italian Fascism.35 Father Gillis's unvarnished criticism of Mussolini was a response to the dictator's attacks on the Church and his use of the state as an instrument to undermine the freedoms of the Italian people. Mussolini was a Nietzchean, not a Catholic, Gillis insisted, and his wild diatribes and threats of violence would bring ruin to Italy and possibly bring on another European war. In short, wrote Gillis, "Mussolini is mad."36 Although II Duce and his boosters claimed that he saved Europe from Bolshevism, Father Gillis observed that he certainly did not choose to save it for democracy. Mussolini's contempt for Parliament showed that he was not a democrat but a demagogue.37 Father Gillis, much like Virgil Michel at Orate Fratres, recog nized that the Fascist concept of an omnipotent state ran contrary to the claims of Catholic teachings, for it refused to accept the fun damental premise that the spiritual and sacred were the domain of the Church. In America Catholics had long been yoked with the charge of a "divided allegiance," that is, a split loyalty concerning matters of religion and politics. But Gillis asked if there might also be another, more important "divided allegiance," namely, the evil of an exaggerated nationalism which pitted loyalty to state against one's conscience.38 What Mussolini was really reviving, argued Gillis, was not a Catholic Rome but rather a pagan Rome, a state absolutism redo lent of the tyrannical caesar where those who refused divine honor were crucified, decapitated, burned alive, or offered to the lions. The central issue in Italy, said Gillis, was that the state was transgressing the boundaries of the Church. Mussolini's ploy was to isolate the Church, to keep it in the cloister without any ties to the social and
Early Catholic Critics of Fascism 233
political world. Yet in practice Church and state had a thousand points of contact. Rather than being mutually repellent, the nature of these institutions was to coalesce in such a fashion as to promote the common good. In this respect the true destiny of religion and government was mutual cooperation. However, Fascist doctrine denied this possibility, for it asserted that the citizen belonged to the state, not the state to the citizen. 39 Not only did Father Gillis eviscerate Mussolini's Fascism, but most notably he went after other Catholics who failed to appreciate its evil. Those who defended Mussolini, asserted Gillis, were so pre occupied with communism that they failed to see the true nature of Fascism, and this was largely because they were not really con cerned with tyranny unless it was anti-Catholic. The London Tablet was singled out here, as was the post-Chesterton G.K s Weekly and the English Catholic journalist Douglas Jerrold. In fact there were very few Catholics who showed such a warm heart for Fascism as did Belloc's friend Douglas Jerrold. In The Future ofFreedom (1938), for example, Jerrold went so far as to say that there was no perse cution of religion in Hitler's Germany, an assertion that the pope himself contradicted in the 1937 encyclical Mit brennender Sorge. As for Italy, Jerrold made the outlandish argument that any Christian in Italy was better off than in England insofar as the practice of his
religion was concerned. In response to Jerrold, Gillis asked what the practice of religion actually meant: did it involve social injustice? Were Catholics supposed to rise from their knees after Mass and venture forth into the light of day to apply what the Church taught? Could men of Catholic action in Italy go into the streets, factories, shops, and stores to preach social justice? Was there freedom of speech and press in Italy so that citizens might address papal teach ings on racism or the state's rights over family and Church?40 In fact, in the encyclical Non abbiamo Bisogno (1931), which America's Mon signor Francis Spellman smuggled out of the Vatican to be pub lished in Paris (such was the environment of oppression in Italy), Pius XI criticized the Fascists for not allowing Catholics to pursue Christian social action. Fascists, said the pope, had "committed acts of oppression'' and "terrorism" against the Church. Non abbiamo Bisogno concluded with a warning against "pagan worship of the
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State." After reading the encyclical, Mussolini flatly declared that Fascism and Catholicism were incompatible. Jerrold, of course, con veniently overlooked all such issues in his panegyrics on Mussolini. He made no reference whatever to Non abbiamo Bisogno in The Future
ofFreedom. Finally, Father Gillis raised the moral question of a just war after Mussolini's invasion of Abyssinia, an issue that would take on even greater significance when Franco rebelled against the Repub lican government in Madrid one year later. Augustine and Thomas Aquinas, noted Gillis, established that a "just war" can occur only when all efforts to avoid it have failed. Since Italy had defied all attempts at arbitration by the League of Nations, its invasion of Abyssinia, on strictly Catholic grounds, was unjust and thus unethi cal. 41 The Fribourg Congress of 1931 set out the Catholic ethics of war in a document signed by seven of the best-known moralists of the day. It concluded that "a war declared by a State on its own authority without previous recourse to the international institutions which exist cannot be a lawful social process." Father Gillis's position on the injustice of the Abyssinian war was also echoed in the writings of Don Luigi Sturzo and was simi lar to that adopted by other Catholic journals, such as Les Etudes, La Vie Intellectuelle, Blackfriars, and Commonweal.42 Gillis was espe cially critical of English Catholic publications such as G.K s Weekly, the London Tablet, and the Month, which downplayed the evil of Mussolini's behavior by equating it with nineteenth-century British and American imperialism. These commentaries, claimed Gillis, ignored the primary ethical issue, which must always take prece dence over the imperatives of politics. Gillis called Chesterton's stance equating Mussolini's Abyssinian invasion with the "soiled hands" of English colonialism as "journalistic tripe . . . more sick ening than any bad logic or false ethics that has appeared in the American papers."43 The Catholic World was particularly incensed with the Italian hierarchy's support of the African campaign. One of the most influential Italian churchman, Cardinal Schuster of Milan, asserted that the war in Abyssinia was justified because it would end slavery and bring the blessing of the faith to Africa. Gillis, however, pointed
Early Catholic Critics of Fascism 235
out that a war otherwise unjust can not be made morally correct because of the good results that might accrue. In this sense the end does not justify the means, for a basic maxim of Catholic theology is that an evil may not be perpetrated in order to bring good. 44 Father Gillis was buried in a deluge of vituperative condemna tion from Catholics for his editorial stance, in particular for what some called blatant anti-Italian prejudice. This was the first signifi cant expression of editorial criticism in the nearly fourteen years since Gillis had taken over the Catholic World. 45 Gillis responded that a basic tenet of Catholic journalism that fundamentally set it apart from all other journalism was the necessity of being univer sal, of speaking "urbi et orbi" (to the City and the World) , as the popes frequently asserted in making their opinions and judgments. Good Catholic writers had to be both supra-national as well as supra-racial. To be truly Catholic, insisted Gillis, "a paper must be consistently, invariably, impartially universally opposed to tyranny and injustice."46 The Catholic World under the editorship of Father James Gillis and a small number of liberal Catholic publications in Britain and the United States lived up to such standards. Far too many others, however, lost their perspective and balance in an anticommunist crusade that took on religious proportions. The zeal of holy war blinded conservative Catholics to the faults of what turned out to be false friends on the political right.
C HAPT E R 10
S ocial Catholicism and the Career of H . A . Reinhold His was one ofthe class ical cases ofthe pioneer unnoticed, the inventor whose rightful rewards are reaped by others, the hum ble hero who goes through life unknown, unhonored and unsung and whoseplace is left to history. -Msgr. George W. C asey on Father H . A. Reinhold, The Pilot, 17 February 19 68
F
ather James Gillis , discussed in chapter 9 , was one of America's most respected and powerful C atholi c j ournal ists; h i s e d i torship of the Cath olic World was a b adge of
respectability and a shield of sorts against the criticisms of conser vative C atholics (Gillis was ranked third among American C atho lic wri te rs i n America 's n ati on al poll of the greatest living Catholic auth o rs ) . It was far more diffi cult for th ose o n th e fri ng e , such as
supporters of Dorothy Day's and Peter Maurin's C atholic Worker movement an d l i b eral C ath o l i cs i nvolved with the fledgl i ng li turgi cal m ovement. Members of th e l atter group we re frequently h eld i n suspi cion by th e Church h i erarchy and regard e d as "revolu ti o n ary" a n d "dange rous " com mun i sts , o r a s "fools who d o n o t l i ke Benedi cti on," a s one o ffi ci al called th e m . 1 Perh aps n o Catholic suffered m ore for th e courage of h i s con victi ons on such issues th an th e German
refugee pri est , H ans Anscar
R e i n h old (H. A . R . , as he l i ked to refer to h i m s el f) . Father Rei n h ol d, al o n g wi th Fath er Vi rgi l M i ch e l , O . S . B . , th e foun der o f Orate
Fratres (l a ter Worship) , wa s a m ai n spri ng of th e Ameri ca n l i turgical m ove m e n t. In fact, besi des Fath er M i ch el (wh o d i e d b efore th e results of h i s p i o n eeri ng work were re al i zed) , H . A . Rei n h ol d , h i s successor a s wri ter o f Orate Fratres's "Ti m ely Tracts, " wa s prob ably A m eri ca's si ngl e m ost i n fl u en ti al proponent of l i turgi cal re n ewal .
Social Catholicism and the Career of H. A. Reinhold 237
Reinhold was a "planter of ideas," as one member of the clergy described him, whose liturgical work helped fertilize the soil from which sprang the reforms of Vatican Council II.2 H . A. Reinhold's own spiritual rejuvenation began during the revolutionary upheaval that followed Germany's defeat in World War I. Personally disillusioned by the breakup of Germany after having risked his life at the front (he was decorated with the Iron Cross, the Hanseatenkreuz, and the Schwartz Verwundetenabzeichen), Reinhold seemed to have lost his intellectual and spiritual bearings. Everything changed with his discovery of Romano Guardini's The Spirit ofthe Liturgy. 3 Reinhold read the book twice at one sitting. Too excited to sleep that night, his mind was filled with a new vision of the Catholic Church. Like many German Catholics of his day, Reinhold had been brought up on an authoritarian, didactic religion that was devoid ofintellectual substance and wanting in spirituality. His religious teachers, he recalled, could never even explain the meaning of the Mass. They could only describe its form and ritu alistic appearances. Guardini's book showed him that the Mass itself was a distillation of a new way of life: "The legalistic body of restric tions and commandments which I used to have in mind and which I used to defend in fierce and dull despair, had vanished before the vision of Christ's Mystical Body and the incredible beauty of His Mystical life among us through His sacraments and mysteries."4 Following his encounter with Guardini's liturgical insights, Reinhold entered the University of Freiburg as a student of phi losophy. After graduation he attended a Jesuit seminary at Inns bruck and spent a year with the Benedictines at the Abbey of Maria Laach, the birthplace of European liturgical renewal. Reinhold was eventually ordained as a secular priest. From the outset he devoted himself passionately to the ideas he had absorbed at Maria Laach. He immediately introduced the dialogue Mass in his first priestly assignment in 1925, only to have it forbidden by his superiors. He also devoted himself to one of the central objectives of liturgical reform: Catholic social action. In 1930 Reinhold helped found the International Council of the Apostleship of the Sea. As secretary-general of this association he organized a German branch of the Apostolate, which soon became an early center of resistance to Nazi seamen's unions. A central
23 8 CATHOLIC I NTELLECTUALS AND T H E CHALLENGE O F D E M O C RACY
objective of the Apostleship of the Sea was to help seamen develop spiritual independence and to train them as apostles for religious and social causes. Father Reinhold wrote a monthly magazine for the sailors and a bimonthly newsletter for officers. In these articles the outspoken and independent-minded priest stressed the spiritual and political dangers of communism, but unlike so many other German Catholics at the time, he avoided seeking help in this strug gle from the political right. In fact, he excoriated the followers of Hitler in the same tones as the Marxists. Reinhold soon concluded that the Nazis were the more serious threat to German democracy and the Christian religion. He informed his charges of this fact openly in writing and in lectures, attacking the Nazis as perverters of religion and an immediate threat to world peace. Father Reinhold's considerable influence among seamen prompted the Nazis to infiltrate his organization with spies. They eventually gained access to his personal secretary, who informed the Gestapo of Reinhold's various political activities, including his secret meet ings with former prime minister Heinrich Bruening and with the French Consul, and his reports to Catholics in England.5 One of Father Reinhold's early contacts outside of Germany was E.J. Oldmeadow, editor of the London Tablet. From the out set Reinhold was apprehensive about writing in the foreign media for fear of Nazi reprisals against himself and his family. His corre spondence with Oldmeadow and others, however, reveals a perspi cacious and prescient understanding of the true nature of Hitler and Nazism. Writing to Oldmeadow in 1935, Reinhold chastised him for thinking that Hitler would vanish as quickly as he arrived and for believing, along with many others, that Hitler was a puppet of con servative special interests. Reinhold warned that Hitler was really his own man and would "stand to his last aims" as declared in the first edition of Mein Kampj as soon as the European and world situ ation allowed him the opportunity. (Very few of Hitler's critics in 1935 took what he said in Mein Kampf seriously) . There was only one solution to the Nazi problem, insisted Reinhold, and that was a second world alliance against Germany, whose dictator was intent on world war. Reinhold's fear of Nazi spies was such that he asked Oldmeadow to take his letter to the nearest fireplace and burn it.6
Social Catholicism and the Career of H. A. Reinhold 239
The central purpose of Father Reinhold's activities immediately after Hitler became chancellor was to alert the outside world that the Nazis were targeting for persecution not only Jews but also Christians, Catholic and Protestant alike, as well as dissident politi cians, writers, and artists. In spite of Nazi propaganda stressing the importance of Christianity and family values, claimed Reinhold, Nazism represented "the German form of Bolshevism." Hitler aimed to create "a German shinto religion" by deifying the state, the so-called Aryan race, and his own person. Germany was rapidly becoming totalitarian, and in this respect there was little difference between Berlin and Moscow. 7 Reinhold's warnings were largely dismissed by the Catholic hierarchy in Germany, whose general consensus was that a deal could be made with Hitler in common defense of the old verities of religion against communism. What made matters especially trou blesome for Father Reinhold, however, was the misfortune ofbeing under the jurisdiction of Wilhelm Berning, bishop of Osnabriick. Berning was an ardent defender of Cardinal Adolf Bertram ofBres lau, chairman of the Fulda Bishops' Conference, the official body representing the Catholic Church in Germany. The cardinal was himself no devotee of democracy; nor, would it seem, were a great many German Catholics in general. 8 Although Bertram found National Socialism repugnant and a deadly threat to Catholicism (the real danger of the Nazis, Bertram said, was the fanatical fash ion in which they sought their goals) ,9 he appreciated their anti Bolshevik and anti-liberal positions. These were sentiments shared with his close friend, the reputedly pro-Nazi papal nuncio to Ger many, Cesare Orsenigo.10 Although Cardinal Bertram was not as optimistic as his fellow bishops that the much-discussed 1933 Concordat with Berlin would resolve church-state conflicts with the Hitler regime, 11 he was con vinced, once the agreement was concluded, that the Catholic Church must adhere to its provisions and seek accommodation with the Nazis. In his mind, open opposition, as exemplified by Father Reinhold, brought the risk of Nazi persecution and incal culable harm to Catholics. Most significantly, Bertram feared the return of another Kulturkampj He and most other bishops of the
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Fulda Conference felt it better to find agreement with Hitler than to resist the Nazi regime.12 Since Bishop Berning was an outspoken and trusted supporter of Bertram's policies of conciliation, the cardinal appointed him to serve as the Church's chief negotiator with Hitler's government. Berning also had the advantage of being held in high regard by the National Socialists. Much to the surprise of many Catholics, in July 1933 he was appointed by Hermann Goering to be a member of the reorganized Prussian Council of State. The bishop of Osnabrock took great pride in his official rank as Prussian Staatsrat, although the Vatican appears to have had some doubts about the wisdom of assuming such a position.13 At times Berning gave the appearance of being a zealot in his service to the regime. For instance, at his inauguration as member of the Council of State he declared that German bishops not only accepted and recognized Hitler's Reich but would serve it "with ardent love and with all our energies."14 The important thing in Berning's mind was for Catholics to demonstrate their loyalty as German patriots. It was in such a spirit that the bishop reminded the inmates at the concentration camp Aschen dorfer Moor that they had an obligation to be obedient and show fidelity toward the state, as this was demanded of them by their faith; and he praised the camp guards for the patriotic work they were doing for the Nazi regime.15 Like many other Catholic ec clesiastics in Germany, Berning regarded Hitler as a force of reju venation; his movement was a great popular wave on whose crest the Church must ride, lest, once again, it miss the chance to join the cause of the masses as had happened during the time of Martin Luther. Father Reinhold believed that Bishop Berning was well-meaning but naive about political matters and thus was duped by Hitler. For his part, Berning deflated Reinhold's numerous and very detailed reports of Nazi atrocities as merely "regrettable excesses in the first flush of revolution."16 In any case, joked the callow Berning, Rein hold was nothing but an "old Bolshevik."17 The benighted bishop may have been making light of the matter, but the charge stuck, and Reinhold, via Nazi propaganda filtered through conservative Catho lics, suffered the curse of bearing the Marxist label throughout his years in exile.
Social Catholicism and the Career of H. A. Reinhold 241
Matters became increasingly difficult for Father Reinhold after the signing of the Concordat between Berlin and the Holy See in July 1933· Bishop Berning, along with Archbishop Konrad Grober ofFreiburg (who believed that Catholicism and National Socialism were in principle reconcilable), played an important role in paving the way for the negotiations. A fatal mistake, however, was Grober's and Berning's failure to persuade Berlin to accept a list of Catholic organizations that would be protected from state interference. The papal secretary of state, Cardinal Eugenio Pacelli, thought it wise to hold up the agreement until a list was accepted, but the bishops, eager to limit Nazi actions by legal agreements, urged the Vatican to ratify the document. This proved to be a costly mistake, for in the absence of a list of protected associations the Nazis could attack Catholic groups with legal impunity. Despite this tactical error, Bishop Berning was so satisfied with the final agreement that he ordered a Te Deum of thanksgiving to be rung in all the churches in his diocese of Osnabriick. Father Reinhold blamed Franz von Papen, the Catholic vice chancellor of the Third Reich, for maneuvering the Holy See into signing the ill-fated Concordat. Von Papen had been a zealous pro moter of rapprochement between the Church and National Social ism. He believed that Nazism could fulfill so many of Germany's national ambitions that the Church was obliged to make compro mises with Hitler. This was made more palatable to many Catho lics, it seems, after von Papen discovered a myriad of affinities between Catholicism and the teachings of Hitler: both were con servative, supported corporative ideals, emphasized the importance of authoritarian guidance, attacked liberalism and Bolshevism, and preached the importance of family values and religion. This was pre cisely the line of argument put forth by Catholic philo-fascists when they explained why the Church had a friend in Mussolini. The Concordat was signed on 20 July 1933· It was an unmiti gated disaster in Reinhold's view. Among other things, the legal agreement undermined the possibility of a united Catholic political front against Hitler, since it prohibited Catholic clergy from all political activity. The majority of the German hierarchy and those who controlled the Centrum (the Catholic political party) had made a tragic blunder, wrote Reinhold. Their actions revealed a complete
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misunderstanding of Hitler. Such Catholics were blinded by wish ful thinking. They hoped to tame Hitler by the same devices with which they had boasted of controlling Bismarck. 18 Reinhold was deeply disillusioned with the bishops: "The German Church looked like a strong, heroic and courageous army without leaders. " The episcopate was incapable of recognizing that Hitler was behind the outrages against Christians and Jews (many thought such deeds were perpetrated by Nazi functionaries without the Fuhrer's explicit knowledge) .19 The German bishops, said Reinhold, "were keeping up a policy of feeding the tiger to keep him quiet."20 He dedicated himself to exposing the folly of the agreement.21 H. A. Reinhold was first arrested by the Gestapo in July 1934 on the charge of "hostility to the state and the party" but was soon released due to insufficient evidence. Friends and family advised him at this point to leave Germany, but he refused so long as he still had a chance to expose Nazi policy. Meanwhile, as member of the execu tive board of the International Seamen's Apostolate, he traveled throughout Europe in the capacity of attache priest, where he spread the word of Nazi brutalities and secretly helped German anti-Nazis who had fled into exile. Reinhold's continued outspoken criticism of the regime was a source of great embarrassment to Bishop Berning, who, along with Cardinal Bertram, still worked diligently to placate Hitler. More over, according to article V of the Concordat, which required clergy to protect the state in the same fashion as public officials, Reinhold's behavior was clearly illegal. By 1934 any criticism of National Social ism on the part of priests laid them open to arrest. In December 1934 the Nazis enforced a law forbidding "mali cious slander of State and Property," which led to the arrest of numerous Catholic clergy. The Gestapo had now compiled a large dossier on Reinhold's anti-Nazi activities abroad and implicated him as a communist. Bishop Berning had little sympathy with Rein hold's circumstances, insisting that the priest had fathered his own problems with inveterate "pacifism" and an unnecessary polemical attitude toward the Nazis. Although Berning made some halfhearted efforts to intervene on Reinhold's behalf, the Nazis completely ignored him; the local
Social Catholicism and the Career of H. A. Reinhold 243
Gestapo chief even refused to return his phone calls. On 30 April 1935 Reinhold was expelled from the states of Hamburg, Bremen, and Schleswig-Holstein. Yet Berning insisted that his priest stay with him in Osnabrock and ignore an impending order to report to Gestapo headquarters in Frankfurt for questioning. Bishop Berning, meanwhile, left his diocesan residence in Osna brock for Bremen in order to have dinner with Hitler. Reinhold would have been left alone at the bishop's residence when the Gestapo called. He fled to Muenster, where two Jesuit priests, Fathers Maring and Wahle, helped him cross the German border. From there Father Reinhold traveled to England, where he was promised asylum by the British secretary general of the Seamen's Apostolate. From this point on Father Reinhold labored under the burden of Nazi and German Catholic propaganda, for Berning sent out word that his priest "was not a bona fide refugee" fleeing political persecution, but rather someone with left-wing sympathies who "simply lost his nerve" and ran away from his clerical responsibili ties. In short, Reinhold was "on leave" without permission.22 These charges followed Reinhold wherever he went. For example, a Ger man priest, whom Reinhold identified as Father Groesser, came to America in 1936 with a letter and documents approved by the Gestapo from Bishop Berning for the Chancellery of New York, spreading the rumor "that nobody knew why'' Reinhold left and that he was "a restless person who never staid [sic] anywhere more than a year." Father Groesser's documents and claims appeared to have been accepted completely by the chancellor of the archdiocese of New York, James Francis Mcintyre. There was no persecution of the Church in Germany, argued Groesser, and in fact the German Catholics, in many ways, were better off than their American coun terparts, since Hitler paid for their schools and salaries.23 Added to this were the encouraging reports about the virtues of the new regime from such German religious luminaries as Karl Adam and Joseph Lortz. 24 With such references, and as a secular priest without the benefit of support from an international order, Father Reinhold was unable to find parish work in England, where he was obliged to live on
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charity.25 One of Father Reinhold's benefactors, A. Hudal, wrote that in the spring of 1935 the priest was "entirely destitute of all means." Mr. Hudal sent Father Reinhold a small sum to help him through this period of difficulty and wrote a number of letters to other Catholics in America and Europe calling attention to his pre carious situation.26 After two months in Britain, not a single bishop gave Reinhold even a brief audience, with the exception of Arch bishop MacDonald of Edinburgh. He was generally handled, Rein hold said, by "petty secretaries," although the lower clergy and lay officials of the Seamen's Apostolate were kind and supportive.27 Father Reinhold moved to Switzerland, where he found tem porary work as a curate in a parish in Interlaken. He also managed to travel extensively, briefing many high-ranking European Catho lic officials about conditions in Germany and warning them that the apparent cooperation between the German Church and Hitler was no more than a Nazi diplomatic ruse. Reinhold gained conferences with the papal secretary of state, Cardinal Eugenio Pacelli, Cardi nal Theodor Innitzer of Vienna, Bishop Edward Myers of London, Archbishop Emmanuel Anatole Chaptal of Paris, and Archbishop Johannes de Jong of Utrecht. All I received, wrote Reinhold, was a "doubtful reputation as an 'excited' emigrant . . . . Who was I, when in Germany everything-a few minor incidents subtracted-was in peace."28 As a refugee priest, Father Reinhold was driven to tell the world of Hitler's persecution of Christians and to warn of his plans for war. The first objective was difficult in the face of Goebbels' propaganda, for common opinion was that only Jews and communists were tar gets of Nazi persecution. Reinhold was deeply upset over the lack of civic courage exhibited by German Catholics in their failure to speak out against the Nazis: "Men, leaders at that, who privately admitted that Hitler was a murderer and knave, stood in the mar ket places and invited the Catholic German youth to be loyal to their beloved 'Fuehrer."'29 Perhaps the most ironic of Reinhold's many meetings with Catholic hierarchs was that with Cardinal Innitzer of Vienna. The Cardinal listened quietly for an hour or more without interrupting as Reinhold held nothing back concerning the Nazis. Then Innitzer
Social Catholicism and the Career of H. A. Reinhold 245
offered his own point of view. First, he told Reinhold that his opin ions were obviously j aundiced by the wrongs he had suffered and thereby dismissed his warnings. Hitler, he asserted, would never seize Austria. The Fuhrer had said that he had all he needed, and with unemployment in decline Germany would soon be normal again. Even if he should be tempted, commented the cardinal, Hitler was like himself and like Austria: "we are both Sudetan Ger mans. Austria has always lived through subtlety and outfoxing her adversaries. We are very different from your clumsy north German bishops. Hitler would never get anywhere in Austria. We have a tra dition of cleverness and astuteness."30 When Austria was invaded in March 1938, Cardinal Innitzer called it "providential" and tried to deal with Hitler as a fellow Sudetanlander. In an open and fawn ing letter to Hitler, Cardinal Innitzer pledged that the Catholic hierarchy and the people of Austria would cooperate fully with the Nazis. He concluded his offer with the signature "Heil Hitler." The Cardinal was quickly summoned to the Vatican for a fiery scolding from Pius XI, after which he feasted on crow: Innitzer published his errors in a long apology to the Pope and the world at large in
L'Osservatore Romano. 3 1
"I have no other intention," wrote Reinhold under the assumed name Adolf Schuckelgruber in The Catholic World, after a detailed expose of Nazis methods of obtaining German Christian support, "than to demonstrate to the American public that the Catholic Church in Germany lives under the same threat as the Russian orthodox community" under the dictatorship of Stalin.32 It was always Reinhold's contention that Nazism was designed to serve as a surrogate religion, a modern secular replacement of that one great Christian idea that had united Europe in the Middle Ages. In order to broaden its appeal, Nazism utilized existing beliefs and emotions as far as possible-the outrage over the Versailles peace settlement, the growing public distrust of Weimar economic and social orga nizations, and especially the authoritarian Christian religious sen timents and cultural tendencies of the German people-to serve its totalitarian creed. In this respect, the Nazis learned from Russia's mistakes. Rather than destroy a positive religious force, Hitler chose to graft it to Nazi ideology in order to solidify the party's outreach
24 6 CATHOLIC I N T ELLECTUALS A N D T H E CHALLENGE O F D E M O C RACY
to the German masses.33 Thus, insisted Reinhold, totalitarianism must be recognized as a religion, one that is absolute and knows no compromises, a form of life that pervades the whole of a people. Christians can live under such regimes only if they understand their true character, but they can never be active Bolsheviks, Fascists, or Nazis in the full sense of such creeds. The life of a Christian must serve as a living protest against a system that claims their whole per sonality for worldly purposes. Liberal and democratic principles had shielded Europeans from such horrible possibilities in the past. But as the "Prince of this World arises in the Place of God and His Sav iour we can only reply with the old warfare of Christians: resistance unto martyrdom against the old enemy, be he clad in red, or brown or black robe."34 It is important to stress the fact that Father Reinhold con demned his German co-religionists not only for their silence on Hitler's attacks on Christians but also for their silence on atrocities against Jews. As long as the Nazis shot communists and Jews, noted Reinhold, German Catholics did not see it as their affair. Catho lics seemed to think that "to protest against these outrages . . . and to investigate their case or to cry injustice was only prejudicing their own cause." German Catholics simply had not learned the truth about totalitarianism, nor did they understand the indivisibility of justice.35 Reinhold had a keen historical and sociological under standing of anti-Semitism, was sensitive to Jewish issues, and had a deep aversion to Catholic manifestations of anti- Semitism.36 As a refugee in America, for example, he worked closely with Catholic groups fighting anti-Semitism and was especially supportive of "Opus Sancti Pauli," organized by Father Johannes Oesterreicher to counteract anti-Semitism in Catholic ranks. The fight against anti-Semitism, the Pope told Oesterreicher, "is a most important apostolate of our times." Reinhold appreciated the imperative of Pius's charge: the campaign against Jews could be "the death blow to our catholicity and universality." Those who attack Hebrews, he noted, do not have any liking for Catholics either. Once they finish with Jews the guns would be turned on Catholics. Not only do Catholics share the Old Testament in common with Jews, "but we also support a universalism, an anti-rationalism, and a moral and
Social Catholicism and the Career of H. A. Reinhold 247
ritual law, all of which are equally annoying to anti-Semites."37 Yet despite such appeals, Reinhold's own writings in America on the evils of anti-Semitism brought charges from some Catholics that he himself must be Jewish.38 Father Reinhold showed very little tolerance for his fellow Ger man Catholics in positions of spiritual leadership who could not see what he saw or, even worse, preferred to keep their eyes and mouths closed for the sake of peace. These were the pusillanimous "irenic clergy," as Reinhold scornfully referred to them, "the worst pack of people on God's earth" whose tactics could at times be terroristic.39 As Nazi violence increased, many German bishops blamed the excesses on overzealous followers of the Fuhrer. They failed to ap preciate, claimed Reinhold, that it was really Hitler who was behind the outrages perpetrated by his henchmen. The bishops "were keep ing up a policy of feeding the tiger to keep him quiet," an unfortunate stratagem to which the German hierarchy had grown accustomed ever since the passing of Bishop Ketteler. If the Church survives in Germany, lamented Father Reinhold, it will only be through the "stubbornness, patience, and sound instinct of the faithful and the rank-and-file parish clergy."40 In addition to waging a propaganda campaign against Hitler, Reinhold's other major activity as a refugee both in Europe and later in the United States was to raise aid for Christian refugees from Germany. World opinion held that only Jews were being persecuted by the Nazis. This was due, in part, to the fact that Hitler's govern ment refused to recognize any refugees other than Jews. The Nazis did not want Jews to remain in Germany, but non-Jews-so-called Aryans-who left the country were regarded as traitors and political enemies. This placed severe constraints on the German bishops, for to acknowledge the existence of Catholic refugees would have made them guilty of aiding the enemy in the eyes of the Nazi government. There were a sizeable number of non-Jewish exiles from Ger many in the 1930s in Europe, and in fact by 1936 they vastly exceeded Jewish refugees. Among these were former politicians of the Catho lic Center Party, numerous editors of Christian papers, and various types of professional people who found Nazism repugnant. In all these totalled some fourteen thousand, of whom roughly one-sixth
24 8 CATHOLIC I NTE LLECTUALS AND T H E CHALLENGE OF D E M O C RACY
were Catholic.41 The countries bordering Germany had been flooded with refugees and were unable to absorb them into their economies. Living conditions were wretched, many refugees of middle-class background being completely unable to support themselves. Fur thermore, as Father Reinhold told one wealthy American whom he solicited for refugee financial aid, police restrictions regarding work ing permits in Europe were so heavy that most turned to beggary. Their socialization in a bourgeois /intelligentsia world proved insufficient for finding their living on the streets.42 A turning point in Father Reinhold's life was his decision to travel to the United States. The journey was prompted by Dorothy Day, who wrote him in Switzerland in 1936 explaining that nothing was being done by the American Church to help Catholic refugees from Hitler's regime.43 Nazi propaganda, however, had so poisoned the air that non-Jewish refugees in America were generally regarded as "contaminated." In Father Reinhold's case, the suspicion endured. His friend, Father Thomas Carroll, remembered that Reinhold's stories were scoffed at by all too many people: "I can recall, before knowing him, hearing verbally of a German priest in this country who was telling very exaggerated stories about the danger of Hitler and Nazism. He was a prophet here too, but even he could not know the full horror which was to be."44 Despite impressive letters of introduction by reputable Catho lics, including the best reference possible from Monsignor Kreutz, for many years president of the German Caritas-Verband, Father Reinhold found no hospitality from the New York Catholic Chancery and therefore contacted a group of Protestants who were concerned about the refugee problem. Many of these people were willing to lis ten to him and provide shelter. 45 The American Catholic Church at this juncture did not recognize the necessity of refugee work. Father Reinhold, however, found a handful of American Catholics, includ ing Professor Carlton ]. Hayes of Columbia University, Michael Williams, founder of Commonweal, and George Shuster, who, along with his new Protestant acquaintances, were willing to join forces across religious boundaries to address the refugee problem. This resulted in the formation of an interdenominational organization of clergy and laymen called the American Committee for Christian
Social Catholicism and the Career of H. A. Reinhold 249
Refugees. Father Reinhold was a member of the group's executive committee representing Europe. He hoped to use this association as a catalyst for the establishment of an official Catholic effort, thereby aiding many of his fellow German Catholics who had fled Hitler's regime. In October 1936 the American Committee for Christian Refu gees held a conference at Riverside Church in New York City. Acknowledging that the Nazis were targeting not only Jews but Christians as well, the committee passed a resolution calling on Christian churches throughout the United States to extend relief and disseminate as widely as possible information regarding the deplorable plight of these people so that "funds may be raised to save them from extinction and to provide for their permanent establish ment in countries where they can become self-supporting."46 Those working for German Catholic refugees decided they needed the support of the American bishops to help organize a committee of their own. Toward this end Father Reinhold and others appealed to several influential bishops, including Cardinal Patrick Hayes of New York, for permission to provide information on the situation in Germany to American Catholics (strictly unpo litical, they emphasized) for purposes of raising funds. Progress here was very slow and terribly frustrating. Reinhold complained to the executive director of the American Committee for Christian Refu gees that by October 1936 he had written over a hundred letters to important American Catholics about setting up a Catholic branch of the interdenominational committee, but yet he had no success.47 Persistence, however, paid off: Father Reinhold and his friends were eventually successful in their endeavors, and in fact, Reinhold's reports concerning the condition of Catholics who had fled Ger many were decisive in founding the American Bishops' Committee on Catholic Refugees. After this point, however, Father Reinhold was shut out of the process. The one man who knew more than any one else about the plight of German emigre Catholics and whose knowledge was seasoned by years of clandestine experience help ing refugees, a tireless worker with numerous international contacts, was excluded by the American hierarchy from all participation in refugee work. The decision to isolate Reinhold was made by Cardinal
25 0 CATHOLIC I NTELLECTUALS A N D T H E CHALLENGE OF D E M O C RACY
Hayes, who, with information from Bishop Berning and other high ranking Catholic Nazi collaborators, was convinced that he was a pro-communist agitator. 48 Efforts to aid German Catholic refugees were seriously handi capped at this juncture by opposition from Father Charles Cough lin's followers. Coughlin's influential journal Socialjustice, which found few fascist-type movements it did not like, never offered so much as a single line of sympathy for Catholic exiles. His support ers in New York City claimed that these people were not "Catholics of good standing" (meaning that they had leanings to the political left) and on several occasions openly heckled speakers from the American Bishops' Committee on Catholic Refugees.49 Father Reinhold's situation in the United States was made even more difficult by the head of the New York Chancery, Monsignor James Francis Mcintyre. His contacts with German Catholics sym pathetic to Nazism had encouraged him to keep Reinhold away from American Catholics because of his "unreliable" and "revolu tionary'' political ideas.50 It appears that Mcintyre distrusted Rein hold from the moment they met; he found it impossible to believe that there could be any legitimate refugee priests from Nazi Ger many, such was the quality of religious life under Hitler.51 Conse quently, Mcintyre was unwilling to provide Father Reinhold with any parish work and even restricted his right to say Mass by stipu lating that he not give public addresses on the German situation or speak about his own experiences in Germany. In fact, Father Rein hold was forbidden by the New York Chancery from preaching, writing, saying anything about Germany in public, and even per forming weddings.52 Mcintyre's obduracy was further stiffened by the Spanish Civil War, since Father Reinhold failed to view Franco's uprising against the Republic as a religious crusade, a great battle between the forces of good and evil. This only added to his reputa tion as an unstable radical; Mcintyre increased his pressure, even admonishing Reinhold for casual discussions with old friends from the Hamburg seamen's mission who visited the Catholic Worker's offices in New York City.53 Father's Reinhold's sojourn in New York would have been unbearable, save for the kindness of Dorothy Day, Paul Tillich, and George Shuster, editor of Commonweal. The latter helped him
Social Catholicism and the Career of H. A. Reinhold 251
locate a congenial place to stay in the diocese of Brooklyn, though it took nearly three years to find a diocese that would accept him as its pastor. So desperate was Father Reinhold's desire for minis terial work that in 1936 he considered going to Argentina, the one place where he was offered meaningful employment working again with the Seamen's Apostolate. His removal to Argentina was exactly what the New York Chancery hoped for. Yet there remained the persistent problem of Nazism. All German seamen were forbidden contact with Father Reinhold, and the port of Buenos Aires was honeycombed with Nazi agents. In addition, Italian and Spanish ships were now off limits to him. Argentina was governed by pro fascists, and Buenos Aires' large community of Germans was highly sympathetic to Hitler's regime. For an outspoken critic of Nazism, Argentina presented many dangers. When his sponsor, Father William Cushing, and the bishop of Buenos Aires were unable to provide sufficient assurances for his safety, Father Reinhold sadly declined the offer.54 Father Reinhold's sense of abandonment and rejection was increased by relations with his family. His brother, a Nazi collabo rator, had called Reinhold a publicity-hungry, self-centered prima donna who was sacrificing his family on the altar of vanity. If he had been Hitler, wrote Reinhold of his brother, "he would have shot me and my ilk the moment he came to power." The brother charged that Reinhold's activities abroad were bringing financial ruin to the family business, thereby condemning his mother to starvation. Father Reinhold begged his brother to disown him, to throw him out of the family, and to call him a criminal and a traitor, if this could save them from Nazi molestation, and, finally, to send on his mother whom Reinhold would gladly support in exile. 55 Despite frequent bouts with depression and a growing sense of abandonment, Father Reinhold continued to labor on behalf of fellow refugees. He worked unofficially behind the scenes to liberate them from concentration camps, raise private money to pay medi cal bills, find teaching and writing positions, help them evade the clutches of Nazi agents, and generally provide the encouragement and sympathetic ear that eased the loneliness and alienation that so many of them felt living in strange lands.56 All this he did with out any help from the American Bishops' Committee for Catholic
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Refugees. The best-known recipients of Reinhold's largess were Don Luigi Sturzo and Waldemar Gurian. Dr. Gurian was a preeminent scholar in European circles and was known as one of the most brilliant and best informed Catholic writers on German and Russian affairs. Born in St. Petersburg, Gurian emigrated to Germany with his Jewish family where, while still a young boy, his mother brought him into the Catholic Church. He authored several important books on a wide range of topics, including studies of the political and social ideas of French Catholi cism and of the theory and practice of Bolshevism, Nazism, and nationalism, and was a regular contributor to the best German aca demic journals.57 Like Father Reinhold, Dr. Gurian had been an outspoken critic of the Nazis in Germany. Forced into exile, he fled to Buchrain, near Lucerne, Switzerland. Within a short time bit terness set in, for he felt that the German Catholic exile community had largely forgotten him. Gurian was especially stung by con servative Catholics, who interpreted his anti-fascist positions as inspired by a crypto-socialism; some claimed that he was an agent in the pay of the Third International. This of course was a canard, prompted in part, it appears, by Gurian's detailed critique of the political behavior of Heinrich Bruening, the Catholic chancellor of Germany, which angered many Catholics. Gurian, in fact, was a severe critic of Bolshevism and held that it was contradictory to the spirit of Europe and a direct threat to Western civilization.58 In many respects, Dr. Gurian suffered the same fate as his friend Father Reinhold: both were attacked by right-wing Catholics an tagonized by their criticism of those who were willing to make com mon cause with fascism against the Bolsheviks. Several important Catholic journals, of course, persisted in claiming throughout the 1930s, in the face of mounting violence against German Jews and Christians, that Soviet Russia was the enemy of Christian civiliza tion, whereas Nazi Germany was a bulwark state, guilty of certain excesses perhaps, but essentially Christian and committed to de fending Europe against the wave of atheistic communism. Gurian made it very clear in his private letters and published essays that the extreme right was every bit as dangerous as Bolshevism, his life in Hitler's Germany having schooled him in that reality.
Social Catholicism and the Career of H. A. Reinhold 253
Although Gurian regarded Bolshevism as the greater long-term threat, he believed that Nazism was the immediate danger. Nazi anti-Bolshevism should not be taken seriously, wrote Gurian, for it was simply a propaganda tool to attract various religious, economic, and social groups to Hitler's cause. In fact, the National Socialists and Bolsheviks were nothing more than competitors for power, "children of the same spirit" wielding the same methods for simi lar goals: total domination of the state and its citizens.59 In order to alert German and European Catholics to the real meaning of Nazism, Gurian and another German emigre, Otto M. Knab, a former editor-in-chief of the Starnberg Catholic daily Land und Seebote, launched Die Deutschen Briefe out of Lucerne, Switzer land, on 5 October 1934. The editors, having precious little money, ran the enterprise on a shoestring budget (it was mimeographed on type-script once a week and Gurian himself wrote over 75 percent of the articles). The paper never reached a circulation beyond two hundred, but it offered incisive analyses of Nazism and had con siderable influence well beyond its limited circulation. Le Temps and L'Osservatore Romano used its material. The Gestapo made several attempts to arrest those within Germany who provided the paper with information, and various German bishops, worried about Die Deutschen Briefe's criticisms of their collaboration with Hitler, sent emissaries to Gurian in an attempt to explain why they felt com pelled to cooperate with the Nazis.60 The Roman Church would fail in its earthly mission of social justice, wrote Gurian to Reinhold, if the current thinking that per vaded many Catholic circles, namely, that whoever is against com munism is immediately a friend of the Church, were carried to its logical end.61 The fascist's open appeal to authority, the call for a new morality to replace the current culture of unfettered individualism, and the suppression of anticlerical and Marxist organizations had the effect on Catholics of a narcotic. Their ability to recognize the many defects of fascism was numbed, and in the process, said Gurian, they were seduced into believing that such programs would restore power to the Church. This was a serious miscalculation, a misjudgment of the totalitarian ethos that marked the political experiments of the new century.
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The utopian civilization promised by Bolshevism, which envi sioned man as an automaton governed by utilitarian, mechanistic impulses, was replaced in fascism by the appeal to heroism and national power, which, in itself, became a totalitarian secular reli gion fundamentally at odds with Christianity. In both Bolshevism and fascism the machinery of the state rejected rights of truth and rights of humanity. What Catholics overlooked (hence the neces sity of exposing the true nature of the new Reich), wrote Gurian, was that the fascist anti-Bolshevik would tolerate the Church only so long as it served to increase the power of the state and conformed to the wishes of the party. 62 The fascists, in short, simply "mediate God." That is, they employ Him as a means for legitimizing their power, then use this power to stimulate nationalist activity as an ulti mate end blessed by the Almighty. It was a gross oversimplification to judge the Left according to the measure of "enlightened-Marxist or secularized-Puritan 'mys ticism,"' wrote Gurian, just as it was folly to condemn the Right en bloc as antiprogressive and antisocial. The extremes at either end of the political typology should never be used to define the social good. What Catholics needed to remember after the fires of anger against the Left had subsided was that the Church historically had gained enormously by the legal rights wrought from liberal democratic traditions. These had provided it protection under the rule of law side by side with other bodies within the state. Alsatian Catholics, Gurian noted, were able to fight openly and with uncom promising vigor for their denominational schools against the claims of the leftist Blum government in France. The German bishops, on the other hand, were not permitted to publish their pastoral letters in defense of threatened Catholic schools. 63 Gurian was in dire straights by 1936. Exile had cut him off from his former means of :financial support. Sales of Die Deutsche Briefe provided some income, but this was never sufficient. Though his work was highly regarded, Gurian complained of being mired in abject poverty, without access to the scholarly sources he required to continue research. Gurian's despairing letters to Father Reinhold bristled with bitterness toward those German Catholics whom he felt should have been doing more to help him. Reinhold, for his part, assumed responsibility for Gurian and worked tirelessly to find
Social Catholicism and the Career of H. A. Reinhold 255
journals in Britain and the United States that would accept his arti cles. He also made contacts with publishers for Gurian's books, assisted with editing and translations, and encouraged him to con tinue studying English in order to find employment in America. Throughout these difficult times Reinhold tried to counter Gurian's bleak views and bolster his fading self-confidence by explaining the special circumstances that made it difficult for the exile community to respond to his needs. He offered positive perspectives on those whom Gurian, in his despondency, believed were abandoning him.64 Most significantly, Father Reinhold informed the British and American public about the plight of Gurian, and through his con tacts with such important Catholics as George Shuster, Father James Gillis, Wilfrid Parsons, S .J., Bernard Wall, and various aca demicians at American Catholic colleges and universities, he mus tered support for a professional appointment and a home for his friend. Waldemar Gurian's subsequent impressive career as an Ameri can academic-as professor at the University of Notre Dame and founder of the Review of Po litics owed much to the efforts of Father Reinhold. Father Reinhold's relationship with Don Luigi Sturzo grew out of their shared plight as exiles from fascism and their active involve ment with their respective refugee communities. The two priests also were strongly committed to the cause of social deaconry. Their liberal political, economic, and religious views would eventually find a natural home in Virgil Michel's liturgical movement. Like Reinhold, Father Sturzo had been frustrated with the Church's failure to help anti-fascist refugees. After his flight from Italy, Sturzo continued his contacts with other exiles from the politi cal organization he founded, the Popular Party, and with their assis tance helped set up Catholic unions for Italian foreign workers. However, the anti-fascist Italians who worked in France and other European countries found little help from the Church hierarchy, and this disappointment, along with frustration over the pro-fascist pro nouncements of several bishops, convinced many to join socialist and even communist trade unions. 65 In these years before the world appreciated the true political ambitions of Hitler, Sturzo had become a forgotten man, a lonely but strong voice against totalitarianism who worked in the obscurity -
25 6 CAT H O L I C I NTELLECTUALS AND T H E CHALLENGE O F D E M O C RACY
of a dark little room in the West End of London. Reinhold and a few of Sturzo's more stalwart friends maintained contact with him; they labored to inform British and American Catholics of Sturzo's stature as a religious and political leader, and they tried to sensitize them to the difficult conditions under which the once famous priest had to live. In addition, Father Reinhold seems to have served as a literary agent of sorts for Sturzo. He sought safe storage for Sturzo's manuscripts, eventually placing them in his own bank box. Thanks to Reinhold's connections with such journals as Commonweal and the Christian Front, Sturzo was able to publish his first articles for an American audience. 66 Reinhold sought out various companies to publish Sturzo's books, and tried to find a teaching position for him at Fordham, St. John's University in Minnesota, and Harvard. Sturzo eventually succeeded in his efforts-with a good deal of help from his friends-to come to America in 194i. A special commit tee of prominent Catholics, among whom were Reinhold, Carlton Hayes, George Shuster, Monsignor John A. Ryan, and others, was established to raise money and care for Sturzo while he lived in American exile. It was this committee that found a home for Father Sturzo with Bishop Joseph Patrick Hurley of St. Augustine, Florida.
II
Father Reinhold's greatest and most notable work was in liturgical renewal and social reform. In these areas he represented the best traditions of the papal labor encyclicals and Distributism. As a Catholic social and political commentator he can be placed in the pioneering liberal democratic path chartered by Ozanam, Ketteler, and Manning. H. A. Reinhold eventually found his American spiritual home at St. John's University in Collegeville, Minnesota, the birthplace of the American liturgical movement. After so many encounters with unsympathetic conservative American Catholics, it was a refresh ingly agreeable surprise, wrote Reinhold, to find that so many of the Benedictine monks at St. John's shared his liberal social and politi cal views.67
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The dean of the College of Arts and Sciences at St. John's Uni versity was Father Virgil Michel, O . S . B . , already introduced (in chapter 9) as a staunch critic of fascism and as founder of Orate Fratres (later Worship), the voice of the American liturgical move ment. Dom Virgil Michel was one of America's most inspirational Catholic leaders. His friendship and collaboration with French Catholics such as Emmanuel Mounier, editor of Esprit, and Jacques Maritain facilitated the infusion of a cosmopolitan, liberal-minded Catholicism into American religious life. Among Virgil Michel's prominent proteges were Dorothy Day, founder of the Catholic Worker movement, and Norman McKenna of the Christian Front. Father Michel's vision of the social mission of the Church, called in America the "New Social Catholicism," meant, in the words of Rev. Paul H. Furfey, "a return, with a new loyalty, to the traditional social doctrines and methods of the Catholic Church"68 and had its roots in the nineteenth-century European liturgical revival centered in the German Rhineland at the Abbey of Maria Laach.69 Virgil Michel, along with fellow-Minnesotan Monsignor John A. Ryan, offered some of the clearest and most trenchant explications of Rerum Novarum and its successor, QuadragesimoAnno, to Ameri can audiences. Michel's own success had much to do with the breadth of his education: like Sturzo he had studied carefully the writings of St. Thomas and Karl Marx and had a deep understand ing of both philosophers. Michel admitted that he had learned much from Marx's critique of capitalism and of the ways that capi talism objectified and dehumanized the laboring process. He claimed that many of his conservative Catholic critics failed to see the ultimate social bearing of their own basic Christian principles because they had not allowed their minds to be opened to the reality of contemporary social problems by reading Marx.70 Virgil Michel developed his socioeconomic ideas in the mid r92os while studying in Europe, where he fell under the influence of Dom Lambert Beauduin of Mont-Cesar, professor of theology at Benedictine College in Rome. Father Beauduin began his career as a secular priest working with industrial laborers in the Belgian diocese of Liege. As a young priest he was deeply influenced by Rerum Novarum, and in his capacity as "Chaplain of Workmen"
25 8 CATHOLIC I NTELLECTUALS A N D T H E CHALLENGE O F D E M O C RACY
Beauduin associated directly with the laborers, encouraging them to organize into trade unions for achieving a living wage and an im provement in working conditions. However, in 1906, after eight years of struggle and little success to show for his efforts, Father Beauduin became disillusioned; in a state of frustration he retreated into the Benedictine monastery at Mont-Cesar. It was there that he found an answer to his own spiritual dissolution as well as to the problems ofindustrial society. He joined the Benedictine Order. For Beauduin, the rootlessness and anomie that so marked modern soci ety, the real source of the industrial problem, could be overcome by applying Benedictine monastic ideals to the secular world. The Benedictines insisted on replicating the communitarian character of the early church, most powerfully expressed in the sacrament of the Holy Eucharist. The Rule of the Benedictines emphasized the importance of following the example of Christ as set forth in the Gospels: St. Benedict's monastic ideal was to permeate secular liv ing with Scripture so that God would be truly "all in all . "71 Beauduin concluded that if lay Catholics could actively participate in the Eucharistic liturgy and, in the process of acting out its rituals, think of themselves as part of a Gemeinschaftlichkeit ofbelievers, they could begin to address the true nature of the social problem, which in an industrial society was rooted in the alienation of the individual from his work and community. Beauduin insisted that the Catholic Church must not remain aloof from factories, trade unions, and strikes but rather must reach out and become part of that world, filthy belching smokestacks and all . An exposure to the teachings of Dom Lambert Beauduin led to Virgil Michel's own spiritual renewal. He returned from Europe in 1925 determined to transport Beauduin's vision to America. St. John's Abbey would serve as the working center of a liturgical revival for the United States. Within the next five years ten monks from St. John's were sent to Europe to undertake liturgical study. The vehicles for carrying the Benedictine social message to the pub lic were the magazine Orate Fratres (meaning "Pray, Brethren") , which by 1930 reached three thousand subscribers and appeared in twenty-six countries, and the establishment of the Liturgical Press at St. John's University. Michel's journal was designed to reach clergy,
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seminarians, and the educated laity, essentially those who could lead and teach other Catholics the true meaning of liturgical reform.72 The goal of the liturgical movement was the direct involvement of Catholics in their religion by a return to traditional, more inti mate medieval forms of worship. Yet its concerns went far beyond mere prayer and ritual: more than anything else the liturgists aimed to reintegrate Christians with the Mystical Body of Christ. In this endeavor they emphasized the Mass as a means of extending Chris tianity into the broader life of the community. Much like Chester ton and Belloc, Virgil Michel and the liturgists believed that the ills of extreme individualism, manifested in the creed of capitalism, and its opposite, collectivism, could be overcome only by restructuring the thought processes, values, and social personalities of those who lived in modern society. In short, social reconstruction had to be pre ceded by a renewal of the Christian spirit. The best source of such regeneration, insisted Michel, was the liturgy of the Catholic Church. At the core of Church liturgy was the doctrine of the Mystical Body of Christ, a concept that served as the primary inspiration in the life of the early Christians. This doctrine was always embroidered into the preachings of the church fathers, but in the modern era of agnostic individualism it had become peripheral, largely unappreciated by laity and clergy alike. St. Paul had captured the meaning of the Mystical Body of Christ most succinctly with the image of the human body composed of a head and various appendages. Christians enter the faith through the liturgical ritual of baptism, thus becoming united with Christ as members of the Mystical Body of which He is the Head. This is what constituted the "Christian paternalistic ethic,"73 the ethos of medieval European civilization, which envisioned society as a cor poration headed by God the father and a family of Christian chil dren, brothers and sisters intimately united in Christ: "In this holy fellowship," said Michel, "we find a harmonious combination of the two complementary factors of humankind, that is, organic fellow ship coupled with full respect for human personality and individual responsibility."74 According to the liturgical reformers, the principle of "super natural living solidarity'' symbolized by the offertory procession in
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Holy Communion could not be confined simply to prayer or ab straction but rather required enactment as idea in praxis. This was fully understood by the early Christians who actively participated in the liturgy of the Mass. The common offering "made by them to God became at the same time a common act of love and charity to the poor and needy, so that in one and the same collective but uni tary action they worshipped God directly and served Him indirectly in their countrymen."75 In this respect the Mystical Body of Christ serves as the link between liturgy and sociology that "cannot fail to revive and foster a determination to carry Christ-life into the social and economic sphere."76 The desire to make Catholics more active participants in the liturgy eventually convinced Michel to advocate the use of the ver nacular in the Mass. This was a tall order, for there was considerable ignorance of and opposition to liturgical reform in America. Indeed, Father Michel established his own press mainly because no com mercial house would take a chance publishing liturgical material. 77 Many Catholics thought that liturgical reform was a sterile exercise in rubrics and aestheticism and, on the whole, a submission to the secularism of modern culture.78 The issue was also complicated by ethnic and regional rivalries. Many Catholics on the East and West coasts, especially Irish bishops, seemed to regard the liturgical move ment as part of a search for German identity. In addition, Irish ecclesiastics generally were more conservative than German Catho lics and may have been discomfited by the egalitarian communal ism of the liturgists.79 The Irish clergy, on many accounts, were resistant to liturgical reform in Britain. English parishes were "very stony ground" for the wheat of the liturgy, wrote Father Clifford Howell, S.J., to his friend H. A. Reinhold. As of the 1930s, the great maj ority of English Catholic clergy were Irish born and trained. The English liturgists constantly complained that the Irish were somehow "allergic" to the liturgy. In Irish seminaries there was very little study of Rerum Novarum or Quadragesimo Anno, the consequences being a priest hood largely unprepared to teach Catholic ideas on social recon struction. Indeed, Father Howell complained that the main obstacle to the progress of liturgical reform in Britain was the "prevalence
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and persistence of a completely individualist, sentimental, unintel ligent type of piety based on personal emotion." This, he claimed, was indigenous to the training oflrish clergy and laity alike and per petuated by the continued importation of lrish priests. This was by the decision of lrish bishops, who deemed it cheaper than training English boys for the priesthood. 80 In the United States there was, no doubt, a tendency for some Catholics to dismiss the liturgical movement as part of a populist sentimentality that issued from the Farm Belt. As Sister Antonia McHugh, president of the College of St. Catherine in St. Paul, Minnesota, put it: "The thought of connecting the psalms with socially activated prayers is too irritating to be considered. The whole commotion is doubtless of German origin."81 Yet another stumbling block for the American liturgists was the generally poor religious instruction provided in Catholic parochial schools at all levels. With its uninformed, simplistic catechetical texts and its emphasis on rote memorization of dogma, such edu cation failed to produce graduates capable of understanding, let alone appreciating, the positions set forth in the papal social encycli cals.82 Catholic education did not create an intellectual or spiritual environment conducive to social action. Stanley Vishnewski, an as sociate of Dorothy Day, claimed that American lay Catholic activity in the 1930s "was confined to the five Bs: Bingo, Bridge, Bowling, Bazaars, Beers."83 As a young man Vishnewski discovered that, out side the religious orders, there was little opportunity for Catholics who wanted to follow the social message of the Gospels within the framework of Catholic organizations. Yet, said Vishnewski, had "I written a letter to the Communists or to the Jehovah Witnesses or some Bible sect I would have soon found myself distributing litera ture and preparing myself for an apostolic ministry."84 The American leaders of the "New Social Catholicism" were determined to change all this. 85 The group had a strong sense of cor porate identity: they were all committed to liturgical renewal, cham pioned a more rigorous intellectual attack on communism, and, almost to a person, were highly vocal in their criticism of fascism as a friend or ally of Christianity. As Norman McKenna put it to Father Furfey in reference to the possible topics and invitees for a
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conference on New Catholicism: ''As for pussyfooting on the Ethio pian business, we aren't having any, as the English say. We will state our reasons for opposing Fascism in an early issue, and anyone who wants to defend Fascism will have to tilt a lance with Non Abbiamo Bisogno, the Syllabus ofErrors, De Regimine Principum and other authoritative documents."86 Most significantly, the New Social Catholics were determined to attack the abuses of wealth and privi lege. Father Michel warned that Catholics had been far too negli gent about denouncing such evils; some, he lamented, had even "falsely hidden" their own social injustices "beneath the cloak of the Church."87 Virgil Michel's commitment to consciousness-raising as a prerequisite for transforming the social and economic order assured that there would be a steady cross-fertilization of ideas between the liturgists and the English Distributists throughout the r92os and r93os. 88 A key figure linking the American liturgical revival with Dis tributism was the English Catholic convert Donald Attwater. As an associate editor of Orate Fratres, he was one of the most influential lay members of that journal's board of directors.89 Virgil Michel said that Attwater was his "ideal of an alert and apostolic Catholic lay man."90 Attwater arrived at Distributism through his association with Eric Gill, for whom he served as personal secretary. Attwater introduced Gill to Michel's liturgical ideas, and Gill became an avid supporter of the movement's magazine. (Gill even designed the cover page for the first number of Orate Fratres.) Eric Gill also had important connections with the Catholic Worker movement. Dorothy Day's colleague, Peter Maurin, was a keen student of Gill, and his ideas concerning the virtues of hand craft production and the worker's claims to ownership of the means of production were major influences on Maurin's writings.91 Dorothy Day claimed that Maurin was the primary source for her own con structive notions about social reform. He brought to the Catholic Worker movement, she wrote, the ideas of Guardini, Karl Adam, Luigi Sturzo, Maritain, Eric Gill, Belloc, and Chesterton.92 Arthur Sheehan, Maurin's biographer, noted his subject's careful study of Chesterton and Belloc and believed him to be the purest Ameri can voice of Distributism.93 But Gill was the most widely quoted
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writer in Maurin's "Easy Essays," and in this respect one could argue that Gill was the main conduit of Distributist thinking to the Catholic Worker movement. Virgil Michel also had a close working relationship with Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin. The Catholic Worker movement and the organizations affiliated with it were shelters for intellectuals bitter about what they believed to be the reactionary policies of the Catho lic hierarchy. 94 This was undoubtedly part of the reason that the movement was so frequently attacked by right-wing, philo-fascist Catholics, such as Patrick Scanlan, editor of the Brooklyn Tablet. Vir gil Michel sent the Catholic Worker all publications of the Liturgical Press free of charge. The generosity was returned in thanks and action. Dorothy Day wrote that those who were attracted to the Catholic Worker movement because of its emphasis on social jus tice had also, from the beginning , an equal interest in liturgical renewal. Almost always, she said, the long discussions at Catholic Worker offices came around to the doctrine of the Mystical Body of Christ.95 The zesty intellectual atmospheres of the Catholic Worker offices was legendary. Jacques Maritain, a frequent visiter whenever he was in New York, said that the place had the feel of Charles Peguy's workshop in the Rue de La Sorbonne, and "so much good will , so much courage, and so much generosity. It is thus, with mea ger means, but with much love, that we prepare the future, with great hope."96 The Catholic Worker regularly featured articles on liturgical reform. In addition to his friendship with Dorothy Day and Peter Mau rin, Virgil Michel collaborated extensively with Norman McKenna, who, along with Richard Deverall, broke away from the Catholic Worker and published the Christian Front (not to be confused with another paper of the same name published by those associated with Father Charles Coughlin). McKenna and his group wanted a more aggressive and intellectual approach to America's social and eco nomic problems. Their journal drew on the labor encyclicals and Distributism, and was outspoken in its condemnation of commu nism, fascism, and anti-Semitism.97 Virgil Michel wrote many arti cles for the Christian Front and served as chief advisor to McKenna and Deverall.
26 4 CATHOLIC INTELLECTUALS A N D T H E CHALLENGE OF D E M O C RACY
The liturgist-Distributist linkages also extended into the Ger man Catholic Central Verein of America. The latter was America's oldest national Catholic social organization and the first to take a serious interest in the issuance of Rerum Novarum. Under the aegis of Frederick P. Kenkel, a student of the teachings of Ozanam and Ketteler, the Central Verein published a bilingual magazine, Central Blatt and Socialjustice, which was the first journal to explore the ways in which Catholic ideas of social justice could be applied to America. Kenkel believed that a true Christian society depended on the existence of a sturdy middle class . Yet his concept of a bourgeoisie could not be understood in Marxist terms, for Kenkel's ideal was a vigorous Mittelstand, a broad grouping of small property owners, tradesmen, shopkeepers, and farmers that closely corresponded to what Chesterton and Belloc defined as the core elements of a Dis tributist society. In an effort to strengthen this Mittelstand, Kenkel and the Central Verein were supporters of labor and professional cooperatives along the lines suggested by Bishop Ketteler. To pro mote better understanding of contemporary social and economic matters, the Central Verein established libraries, study circles, sum mer schools, and scholarships. The association also had a long tra dition ofworking closely with the Benedictines of St. John's Abbey.98 Finally, the influence of the liturgical-Distributist revival is shown in the fact that Virgil Michel and Orate Fratres expanded their spiritual alliance outside narrow Catholic circles . Father Michel, for example, had a long working relationship with Maurice Reckitt and the Christendom group, the Anglican advocates of Dis tributism, and he was an avid reader of their publications.99 In April 1936 Orate Fratres welcomed Christendom, the High Anglican quar terly, into the ranks of the liturgical revival. Its vigorous efforts at spreading the doctrine of the Mystical Body of Christ as the oper ative path for social reconstruction, said Michel, meant that this Anglican group was seeking the same ends through the same means as the Roman Catholic liturgists. As founder of both Orate Fratres and the Liturgical Press, Vir gil Michel championed a good many liberal and even radical causes and programs. These included, among others, trade unionism, Dis tributism, personalism (a Belgian Catholic philosophical movement
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that stressed the rights of the human personality against capitalis tic individualism), and, most emphatically, a recommendation to study what was called "cooperativism." This last effort, promoted by the International Consumers Cooperative Movement, was gaining popularity throughout Britain, Scandinavia, and the Catholic coun tries of Europe in the 1930s. It was chiefly concerned with achiev ing a more economically egalitarian society along lines outlined in the papal labor encyclicals and supported by the Distributists. "Pro duction for use and not for profit," the battle cry of the cooperatives, resonated nicely with the concerns of such English Distributists as Father Vincent McNabb and A. J. Penty. Important tenets of its program were democratic government, voluntarism, and the orga nization of economic activity not according to the mechanisms of profit, which ignored the main purpose of economics, but accord ing to consumption needs. A major purpose of the Consumers Cooperative Movement was to enable members to purchase goods more cheaply by eliminating the unnecessary profits of the middle man, thus reducing costs of distribution. The movement was held together by international alliances. In Sweden, for instance, the Consumers Cooperative Societies accounted for over 20 percent of the nation's retail and wholesale trade and IO percent of all manu facturing. In 1935, forty countries were represented by the Interna tional Cooperative Alliance with three hundred thousand societies and a total membership of a hundred million consumers. 100 Cooperative economic ideas were among many subjects of study undertaken by the Institute of Social Study at St. John's University. The Institute was founded by Virgil Michel, with the collaboration of the Minnesota branch of the Central Verein, while he was at St. John's University. Its purpose was to train lay leaders in Catholic social philosophy so they might play a direct and active role in the community by establishing credit unions and cooperative self-help programs . Michel and his associates viewed their enterprise as a positive response to the pope's calls for the promotion of social study. But most importantly, and in a very idealistic fashion, they called for their students to gradually reform social and economic institutions by participating as a living community in the spirit of the liturgy, thereby regenerating not just Christian life but eventually all of America.
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The Institute's seminars and its educational enterprises under taken in the spirit of freedom of inquiry, the raison d'etre of insti tutions of higher learning, brought a torrent of criticism from conservative elements in the Catholic community. These difficulties were exacerbated by Peter Maurin's arrival at the Institute. Maurin's anarchistic opinions had made him unwelcome at many Catholic college campuses. Michel, whose understanding of the papal social encyclicals as well as his training as an educator made him sympa thetic to Maurin's predicament, defended Maurin's presence at St. John's. Peter Maurin was an original, Michel claimed, a fountain head of good ideas and worthwhile projects. 101 Opposition to the Institute of Social Study came from two main sources, both of which symbolized the kind of resistance that gen erally surfaced against the liberal thinking that undergirded the labor encyclicals: conservative businessmen who claimed its semi nars were preaching communism, and the bishop of St. Cloud, the Most Reverend Joseph Busch, who felt the need to control what went on at the Institute in order to prevent the infusion of "dan gerous" socialistic ideas. The bishop objected to what he described as a "laissez-faire" approach to education that was insufficiently didactic concerning church teachings, thereby permitting too much room for "incorrect" thinking.102 The persons critical of Michel's program were convinced that ideas about consumers' cooperatives discussed at the Institute of Social Study represented communism, pure and simple. As one cor respondent explained it, those nations that "went radical like Mex ico, Spain, and Russia" all started down the path to communism by first experimenting with consumers cooperatives . Critics such as these threatened boycotts against the university unless the "Red pro paganda" ceased.103 Father Michel and his associates did their best to counter these criticisms with patience and reason, pointing out that the great orthodox theologian Tanquerey had himself advocated cooperatives and that it was an approach to economics deeply rooted in church teachings, most particularly in the tradition of the Bene dictines. In any case, Father Michel offered his critics the opportu nity to send speakers to the Institute who could present the case against cooperatives. The challenge, however, was never accepted.
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The Benedictines were largely successful in staving off attacks from such uninformed, authoritarian elements, but the opposition was emblematic of the unfavorable environment with which Catholic reformers with advanced social and economic ideas were obliged to contend.104 In the last few years of his life, Virgil Michel set forth a prac tical program for industrial reconstruction, one which, in the final analysis, was highly Distributist in its goals. His program called for worker involvement in the management, ownership, and profits of the productive process; the promotion of private proprietorship; a new credit system to serve the public good; and regulation or abo lition of irresponsible absentee ownership of factories. In order to achieve these objectives, Father Michel recommended the creation of a corporative system in which workers' councils would have a direct role in running factories and where all individuals would have the choice of joining autonomous, freely organized socioeconomic associations that corresponded to their employment. He also advo cated a general "down-sizing" in the living and production struc tures of society (a move away from large, impersonal bureaucratic associations) in order to create a more humane environment for all.105 Following the death of Father Michel in November 1938, the new editor of Orate Fratres, Father Godfrey Diekmann, O . S . B . , needed someone who could carry o n the important column "Timely Tracts." The loss of Virgil Michel left a huge void for the paper, not to mention the American liturgical movement, and Father God frey searched desperately to find a writer armed with the requisite knowledge of European liturgical thought and a zesty pen, who could continue the paper's tradition of provocative essays. Father Reinhold had visited St. John's campus in the previous year and since then had maintained a correspondence with Father Emeric Lawrence, O.S.B., an influential figure in the liturgical revival at the college. Reinhold and Father Emeric had become friends while both were doing research at Harvard's Widner Library. Father Emeric had been impressed with Reinhold's broad knowledge of the litur gical tradition and especially with his appreciation of the linkages between Benedictine monastic ideals and social issues, as well as his familiarity with architecture and liturgical art. Although Father
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Reinhold had only been in America for a few years, he had man aged to master the English language and was already challenging conventional Catholic thinking in provocative articles in Common weal. For all these reasons Father Emeric recommended him to the editor of Orate Fratres, and Father Reinhold was taken aboard. Reinhold's freely-roaming mind and his personal contacts with important, avant-garde continental Catholic thinkers provided the continuity that Godfrey Diekmann sought for Orate Fratres.106 Not only did Reinhold fully endorse Virgil Michel's mission, he had the sharpness of wit, breadth of knowledge (the product of an excel lent European education), and the tenacity of spirit to bring great power to the column. "What characterized him more than anything else," Father Emeric recalled, "was his keenness in getting at the base of things, seeing things and issues as they are and should be. He never wasted time on anything that was not fundamental." In H. A. Reinhold Orate Fratres inherited, in the words of one reader, a "firebrand, a whirlwind, a cyclone," whose unflinching criticism of what was wrong with American and worldwide Catholicism was always anchored in a solid understanding of Christian history.107 As the author of "Timely Tracts," Reinhold continued in the same vein as his predecessor (maintaining, as he put it, a "close inter connection of four apostolates: the social, liturgical, educational and biblical"), 108 though there was a sharper edge to his essays. Reinhold was less the diplomat than Virgil Michel, less gentle with those who failed to heed the message of the Gospels, and bolder in what he believed Catholics should do to change things . 109 Like Michel, he regularly criticized the Catholic Church for its failure to take the lead in fighting social and economic injustice and for its tendency, in too many countries, to side with the wealthy and powerful. He was especially harsh on what he called the "irenic clergy," church men who were afraid of disturbing the delicate balance between the institutional church and those who had the advantage of possessing power and wealth.110 In fact, Reinhold went so far as to suggest that the appeal of socialism and Marxism to workers was a direct result of the clergy's reluctance to understand or take seriously the warn ings of the earlier popes. Virgil Michel's social research corroborated Reinhold's assess ment of the Church's failure in such matters. Michel had studied the
Social Catholicism and the Career of H. A. Reinhold 26 9
Antigonish cooperative movement in Nova Scotia, 111 and one of his contacts, a former member of the United Mine Workers' board of governors, told him that prior to their knowledge of the papal labor encyclicals, almost all Catholic miners voted communist.112 In 1920, he said, United Mine Workers' representatives passed resolutions which were "communistic from A to Z," even advocating the use of force. Indeed, the most devout Catholic miners voted for com munist candidates "because the communists were the only ones that wanted to help the poor people to better their lot." Catholics at this point did not yet know that the Church offered any way out; they knew only that it condemned communism.113 Catholic laborers in Nova Scotia had become lukewarm, almost reluctant followers of the Church. Catholic leaders always talked about what was wrong with both communism and the condition of the workers, but they never spoke of a cure. However, once the miners learned about the message of the papal social encyclicals they turned away from Marx ism. In fact, Michel discovered that some of Nova Scotia's most stalwart communist union officials were now among its leading Catholics.114 Father Reinhold's bold assaults on what he found objectionable in contemporary Catholicism were inspired by the social and aes thetic criticisms of Eric Gill. Gill was at the forefront of a hand ful of Catholic writers who were arguing that the diffusion of "bourgeois-commercial" values was transforming modern culture into a vast wasteland of vulgarity. Its markings were a plethora of bad taste exhibited in all forms of art, literature, politics, education, and even in leisure activities. The "new bourgeois," a term employed by several contemporary Christian philosophers (Maritain, Etienne Gilson, Christopher Dawson, Karl Adam, and Romano Guardini, among others), added to Marx's materialist, class definition of "bourgeois" a Weberian notion of the acquisitive mind-set, fathered by Puritan values, that led to capitalism. The crass materialist values of the bourgeois vulgarian were singled out for special condemna tion in Reinhold's column. In addition to dominating secular culture, the acquisitive spirit of the bourgeois had also made significant inroads into the Church itself, most notably in the "irenic clergy" that Reinhold so despised. A bourgeois, wrote Reinhold, is a "surface man" more concerned
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about the conventions of polite life than with truth, honesty, and genuineness. Above all, he seeks "safety'' in every respect, financial, political, social, and moral. His greatest delights are found in medi ocrity, efficiency, and respectability. For three centuries the Church had resisted the onslaught of the bourgeois, but by the nineteenth century its spirit had breached the barriers. What better documen tation of this, noted Reinhold, than modern drab and uncreative Church architecture, the timid and sterile progeny of masters ofimi tation and make-believe. Reinhold recommended that Catholics look to Gill as someone who knew how to break the siege of the vul garians: he administered the shock treatment that Catholics needed to "snap out" of their Puritan stuffiness in art, sexual matters, human relations, economics, and politics. Gill was opening the gate toward a road that would allow all to find themselves again as Christian, Catholic, and human. 115 Finally, in the Distributist tradition that was so important to the founder of Orate Fratres and the American liturgical movement, Father Reinhold in his "Timely Tracts" columns continued to call his readers' attention to the proper understanding of property and ownership in a Christian society. Most Catholic moralists had prop erly excoriated the evils of collectivism, but in too many cases this had become an obsession; they overlooked the equally pernicious danger of unlimited and depersonalized proprietorship associated with the ethos of capitalism. Far too many Catholics were afraid of alienating their benefactors and loath to disturb the political qui escence encouraged by the ruling elites. They had remained silent about the Christian responsibilities that went with the ownership of wealth. Rights to the ownership of property, Reinhold empha sized, drawing on the writings of Maurice Reckitt and the Angli can Distributists, cannot be something absolute; they must meet certain functional criteria, namely, to improve the quality of living for the commonweal as a whole. 116 Reinhold concurred with Gill that it is just that a man should possess that portion of the field, shop, or factory upon which he can leave the "impress of his per sonality'' for the purpose of perfecting his nature and for the benefit of others. But men must share without hesitation when others were in need. Does such sacred personal property in the Christian litur-
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gical sense sanction the workings of the American capitalist system, asked Reinhold, in which a single individual, such as J. P. Morgan, controls directly or indirectly 70 percent of forty-two railroad com panies and 55 percent of fifty-two other utility companies?117 Father H. A. Reinhold was a worthy successor to the pioneer of American liturgical renewal, Dom Virgil Michel. His labor with Orate Fratres and later with Worship, the corpus of his writing for liturgical reform, and his service to his parish and the Seamen's Apostolate in the United States were distinguished by a rare courage and a willingness to bring Catholicism into the secular world. Even when gravely ill (he suffered from Parkinson's disease and episodes of severe depression), he found time to bridge the religious and secu lar worlds as writer and social activist by assisting his friends at the Catholic Worker. Like his predecessor, Reinhold was a sophisticated scholar with an extraordinary sensitivity to the plight of the poor, underprivileged, and oppressed. For Reinhold, religious belief was always related to action and to the problems of communism, fas cism, democracy, war, peace, poverty, and wealth.
C HAPT E R 1 1
American Catholics Move to the Right
T
he rise of fascism and the growing strength of communism exacerbated political divisions in the British and Ameri can Catholic community. By the mid-193os the Vatican had established a much clearer position on Marxism, as was manifested in the encyclical Divini Redemptoris of March 1937, a root-and branch condemnation of communism. On the other hand, the con cordats with Hitler and Mussolini, Catholic support for reactionary authoritarian governments that came to power in Portugal and
Austria, and the philo-fascist writings of those associated with the highly influential Hilaire Belloc and other reactionary Catholic intellectuals, gave the appearance that Catholicism was prepared to ally itself with dictators to offset the Red menace. This was not necessarily the case, as the encyclical Mit Brennender Sorge, also of March 1937 and sharply critical of Nazi religious policies, suggests. But the Church's ambiguity toward fascism certainly gave the impres sion of general and even official Catholic support and sympathy. In any event, Rome's clearly articulated opposition to Marxism had the general effect of making British and American Catholics especially vigilant in their efforts to battle the infusion of communist influence in all spheres of life. Although many Catholic leaders emphasized that the best way to check communism was to combat the social injustice that spawned the creed in the first place, far too many of their co-religionists became obsessed with Red subversion and in the process turned a blind eye to social and economic oppression and fascism.
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A major force giving shape to American Catholic opinion in the 1930s was Francis X. Talbot, S .J. , editor of the Jesuit magazine America. 1 Father Talbot succeeded Wilfrid Parsons, S.J., as editor of America, and under his direction the tone of the journal shifted noticeably to the political right. In contrast to Father Talbot, whose interests and training were primarily in the area of literary criticism, his predecessor, Father Parsons, had been schooled in the disciplines of history and sociology and, partly for this reason, showed a greater interest in and more sophisticated appreciation of the social and eco nomic issues that confronted American Catholicism.2 This was revealed in the character and orientation of America while Parsons was editor. Prior to 1936, when Father Talbot took charge of the paper, America devoted far more space to papal labor thought, and Parsons himself maintained a busy lecturing schedule, visiting all kinds of associations and groups where he expounded on the appli cations of the social encyclicals to American life. In one radio talk, for instance, Parsons emphasized that America operated from a cen tral idea, namely, that religion had a lot about it which could "occupy the brain'' and that above all, he insisted, Catholicism was "a social thing."3 In this spirit Parsons regarded it as necessary for his paper to support the American labor movement's collective bargaining efforts, its claim of the right to strike, and demands for a living wage, all of which were threatened by "yellow dog" contracts, the danger ous proliferation of company unions, and court injunctions in labor disputes. In fighting these evils Parsons was quick to point out that Pius XI's 1931 encyclical, Quadragesimo Anno, must be seen not so much as mere protest against injustice and inhumanity but as a call for the adoption of a new social order founded on a "fair distribu tion'' of wealth. He also claimed that if the Great Depression were in itself insufficient to undermine the current capitalist system, then the state "must see to it that this is done, by taxing the wealthy, if necessary, to make them do what they will not do of their own free will."4 Parsons certainly had his concerns about the expansion of Marxism and its appeal to American workers, but this problem, he argued, could be avoided if the government allowed labor its natu ral right to organize and provided it some protection from capitalist exploitation.
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America under the editorship of Wilfrid Parsons was an uncom promising critic of the Hoover administration. The administration's laissez-faire approach to the nation's economic troubles betrayed a bias that smacked of what Parsons called the "old liberalism," giv ing liberty to the men of industry, finance, and commerce inde pendent of legislative curbing or any standards of social morality. Mr. Hoover, he wrote, "stood for every principle, economic and social, that is condemned by the Popes in their encyclicals," and it is our duty, he added, to refute the ethical fallacies upon which his administration functioned. 5 Parsons' writings in America and his lectures and correspondence showed a sophisticated understanding of the central issues of the 1930s: economic depression, the idea of corporatism, management/ labor disputes, fascism, communism, and Nazism.6 Father Parsons was an early supporter of Franklin Delano Roosevelt's presidency, for he sympathized with the administration's attempts to introduce legislation for social reform and the regulation of industrial activity in favor of labor. There was something new and quite special with Roosevelt, wrote Parsons, for he was attempting to establish, for the first time in American history, a system founded on the recogni tion of basic working rights through which labor might achieve its fair economic rewards. In a culture steeped in the ethos of rugged individualism, the president was encouraging the principle that the ownership of property carried with it social responsibilities, that there was an important moral dimension to economics. FDR's ad ministration seemed to be willing to assume the burden of achiev ing true social justice. 7 Parsons later concluded that the National Recovery Administration, though a good idea and launched with the best intentions, was put into the hands of the wrong people, who opposed its goals of finding a proper balance between the rights of property and labor and the reconciliation of social justice with indi vidual justice. In too many cases, Parsons concluded, the "oldstyle individualists" were put in full control of enforcing NRA codes. The New Deal, in other words, was administered by old methods: "It was a Democratic idea, and it was run by Republicans."8 Father Parsons was a strong supporter of the American labor movement, but he became increasingly doubtful that the maj or union representing craft workers, the American Federation of Labor
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(AFL), offered much promise for solving the social problem along lines favorable to most American workers. The elitist AFL ignored the majority of unskilled workers, and its conservative social phi losophy and refusal to entertain militant methods gave little hope to Catholics who saw the need to redistribute wealth and power as called for in the papal labor encyclicals. Consequently, Parsons and several other Catholic leaders, notably Monsignor John A. Ryan and his colleagues in the Social Action Department of the National Catholic Welfare Conference, looked to the federal government as an agent for reform.9 In the meantime they urged workers to join a union and use the strike as a weapon to achieve economic justice. The persistent refusal of the AFL to open its doors to unskilled workers led to the formation of a rival association in 1935· In that year those who favored industrial unionism in the factories of mass production formed the Committee for Industrial Organization (CIO). Although many Catholics had urged the unionization of unskilled workers and were disappointed in the AFL's limited social vision, they deplored a split in the American labor movement. The militancy of the CIO, the presence of communists in its ranks, and the rash of strikes that broke out in 1937 caused grave concern for many Catholics. The more conservative condemned this militancy and became convinced that communists were behind the unrest. The liberal Catholics associated with the liturgical movement and Catholic Worker circles were more sympathetic, recognizing that such tactics as the sit-down strike were the only weapons that labor could employ to prevent further erosion ofits power. Father Virgil Michel, for example, argued that the worker's job was itself a form of prop erty carrying with it prerogatives comparable to other property rights. Since strikes were a legitimate means to protect labor's interests, the sit-down could also be seen as a morally legitimate weapon.10 Such sentiment clashed with the views of conservative Catho lics. Reverend Charles Coughlin and the influential Bishop John F. Noll of Fort Wayne, Indiana, editor of Our Sunday Visitor, for in stance, went so far as to charge that the CIO was itself a front or ganization for communists. Given the Church's condemnation of Marxism, Coughlin said, Catholics should be forbidden to join CIO unions. Bishop Noll claimed he had plenty of evidence that a great many well-meaning Catholic ecclesiastics were being "terribly fooled"
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and becoming the "unwitting tools" of the communists.11 N oil criti cized the Catholic Worker in this context: the paper was too radical, its tactics perilously close to those of the communists.12 Catholic supporters of the American labor movement, however, came to the CI O's defense. Voices of approval were heard from sev eral socially progressive bishops (George Mundelein of Chicago, Edward Mooney of Detroit, and Robert Lucey of S an Antonio, among others) . Archbishop Lucey, for example, asserted that the pope endorsed industrial unionism and that the CIO should go fur ther in its demands against capital by claiming the right to manage industry. Labeling the CIO communist, he said, was palpably untrue and a slander of America's laboring classes. Outside the official hierarchy, support for the CIO came from Father Wilfrid Parsons, Father John Ryan, the liturgists, the Catho lic Worker movement, and, perhaps most uncompromisingly, from those associated with the Christian Front. Founded by Norman McKenna, a close friend of Virgil Michel, and Richard Deverall, the Christian Front supported a socially conscious unionism as the means for bringing about a corporate system based on vocational groups as recommended in
Quadragesimo Anno.
Rather than mor
alize about the evils of communist infiltration ofthe labor movement, McKenna and Deverall insisted that Catholics should demonstrate to the American worker that the Church was more concerned, more selfless, and more dedicated than communists in efforts to solve the social problem. Only by doing so would labor ever recognize that there was something called Catholic social teaching. Instead of simply dismissing the CIO as a communist front organization, Catholics needed to burrow within it, support its legitimate claims for power, counter communist influence, and push the movement toward accepting corporatist principles. McKenna and his colleagues were helped in this endeavor by the creation of the Association of Catholic Trade Unionists (ACTU) in 1937. Its purpose was to encourage Catholic workers to become union activists and to introduce them to the programs of the social encyclicals. The ACTU did not aim to seize control of the Ameri can trade union movement for its own sectarian ends but rather sought to show that Catholics could move beyond tribalism and cooperate with others for the attainment of common objectives
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beneficial to labor as a whole. Conservative Catholics were highly suspicious of ACTU policy, however, since its cooperative ethic opened the door to communist contamination, while the insistence that labor actually share ownership of the means of production (which was central to Distributist labor programs) was perceived as radically dangerous to the American system. 13 America under the editorship of Father Parsons gave consider able support to Catholic plans to revitalize the trade union move ment and assumed a pro-New Deal profile because Roosevelt was believed to be a true friend of the working class. Father Parsons also had been prepared to take on the enemies of FDR's reformist objec tives. Along with Rev. John A. Ryan, for example, he was one of the first well-known Catholics to point out the mistaken notions of Father Charles Coughlin, who by 1935 had become one of Roose velt's most vociferous critics.14 Although an initial supporter of Roosevelt, after 1934 Coughlin became increasingly critical of the New Deal because it failed to address what he believed to be the main cause of the depression: a financial conspiracy by international bankers. Father Parsons recognized an authoritarian dimension to Coughlin's ideas that did not square with the papal social encyclicals. The "Radio Priest," as Coughlin was called (his program out of Royal Oak, Michigan, was one of the most popular in America), re commended that strikes be abolished in favor of federally-mandated arbitration boards. Parsons objected essentially for the same reason as had Chesterton and Belloc in their support of the British labor movement: this would place labor under the tutelage of government and thus liable to be easily manipulated by big business. Father Coughlin's views on corporative reform also were called into question by Parsons. Coughlin's program, Parsons pointed out, called only for the worker to enter vocational groups. Quadragesimo Anno, on the other hand, emphasized the necessity ofboth labor and management forming vocational associations so that each could bargain more equally. Coughlin's plan placed the workers at a dis advantage, since it perpetuated the division between a unionized working class and the powers of management. In addition, Parsons saw problems with Coughlin's campaign for credit reform. It continued the dangerous tendency toward in creasing the power of the state, since Coughlin recommended the
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creation of a national bank to replace the Federal Reserve system, which he regarded as a privately owned tool of the financial plu tocracy; he would place the actual ownership and control of credit in the government's hands. Finally, Parsons noted, Coughlin's social credit theories were murky, untried, overly simplistic, and obfuscatory. They had the effect of diverting attention from demand side economics, accord ing to which the real sources of the depression were maladjustments between production, distribution, and consumption. On this issue Parsons supported Monsignor Ryan, who pointed out that "what business needs is not more credit but more sales, and this is an industrial not a monetary problem."15 The real danger concerning Father Coughlin, warned Parsons, was that by dragging his own mistaken views on social justice into presidential politics, which ulti mately would fail, he might undermine Catholic confidence in papal social thought. America, wrote Parsons, would be saved by no mechanical, automatic plan but only through a change of mind and soul: "It seems a shame that Father Coughlin, with his power over the popular mind, has not restricted himself to the reformation of his mind, but has risked
all on
doubtful economic legislation. "16
Parsons' articles in America on Coughlin's economic ideas, which revealed, he claimed, a misunderstanding of the papal social encycli cals, brought a deluge of letters to the paper denouncing the edi tor. Indeed, in reaction to the series Coughlin personally attacked Father Parsons in a speech at Madison Square Garden.17 Parsons, however, had no regrets for his actions. Even before publishing the series on Coughlin, he had written Rev. Hugh Francis Harte that the radio priest's economic ideas appeared completely unfounded in fact, and he expressed his fear that they could lead the Church into a regrettable adventure.18 America's initial enthusiasm for the Roosevelt administration waned rapidly after Father Francis Talbot became its editor. Rather than concentrating on the papal labor encyclicals, the magazine became increasingly sympathetic to business interests and obsessed with the threat of communism. First, Talbot and his staff became convinced that New Deal reforms and the Roosevelt administra tion's attacks on the Supreme Court would strengthen the powers
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of the federal government at the expense of the states and thereby upset the balance of powers guaranteed by the Constitution. Par sons also had some concerns about federal powers undercutting individual liberties (as did a good many Catholic intellectuals), but he believed an antidote to this was to go beyond the New Deal to a cooperative system that would devolve power to vocational groups.19 The second development that turned America against Roosevelt was the administration's recognition of the Soviet Union in 1933, fol lowed by its refusal to denounce religious persecution in Mexico. Adding to these vexations was the rise to prominence within the administration of a number of liberal advisors believed to be sym pathetic to communism. This shift against the New Deal was even more pronounced in two other influential Catholic publications that enjoyed support from Talbot's magazine, namely, Patrick Scanlan's Brooklyn Tablet and Father Charles Coughlin's Social justice. Both Scanlan and Coughlin were moved to action by fears of communism and over centralization of power in the federal government. These papers, along with Bishop Noll's Our Sunday Visitor, mounted a coordinated attack on America's largest industrial union, the newly founded (1935) Congress oflndustrial Organizations (CIO), arguing that its ranks were falling under communist control. Patrick Scanlan and Father Coughlin had also orchestrated a vitriolic campaign against the liberalism of Father John Ryan, an enthusiastic and highly influential supporter of Roosevelt's New Deal legislation. Ryan was not one to hold his tongue on issues close to his heart, and he had openly questioned Father Coughlin's under standing of the labor encyclicals. He had also defended the CIO against charges of being communist controlled. Moreover, there was a scandalous lack of understanding among Catholics of both papal social teachings and the doctrines of communism, a problem com pounded, in Ryan's view, by what Church leaders had to say about such matters. Ryan, for example, had told Bishop John O'Hara that, in his opinion, Bishop Noll's assessment of communist doctrines and challenges, widely circulated in Our Sunday Visitor and in a pamphlet entitled "It Is Happening Here," were the most superficial and unreliable collection of writings ever published by an American
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bishop. His analysis of communism, claimed Ryan, had "about as much substance as the diatribes of the Hearst papers."20 Father Ryan's critics bit back with vengeance. Father Coughlin, for instance, charged that Ryan was a paid agent of the communists and that he had collaborated in writing a book which denied the divinity of Christ. Ryan preferred to fight with Coughlin behind the scenes, recognizing that public battles would only serve to divide the Catholic community. Yet he was acutely aware of Coughlin's capacity for damage. Ryan told his fellow Catholic journalists that Coughlin "is the worst enemy to Catholic causes that exists in the United States today."21 In general, however, Ryan refused to respond to Coughlin's lies because the great majority of his followers were abusive and so set in their ways that nothing he could say would move them.22 In any case, Ryan never felt that Coughlin should be silenced. The principle guaranteeing freedom of speech was more important than Father Coughlin's demagogic preaching, and it cer tainly could serve as a better corrective than enforced silence. 23 Ryan was also circumspect in replying to Patrick Scanlan's attacks in the Brooklyn Tablet for the same reasons. One of Scanlan's tactics, for example, was to publish anonymous abusive, untruthful, and mis leading letters concerning Ryan without providing him opportuni ties to respond in a timely or fair-minded fashion. Privately Ryan considered Scanlan to be not merely an "unfair controversialist" and "reactionary nuisance" but "downright crooked."24 Scanlan at one time had been friendly with Ryan; but after the latter spoke out in favor of FDR Scanlan angrily turned against him. This is also a rea son Scanlan became an ardent supporter of Charles Coughlin: their friendship was forged by mutual hatred of Roosevelt.25 Besides Roosevelt and the New Deal, the other matter of dis pute between liberal Catholics and Talbot's allies was how to address the challenge of communism. Whereas Wilfrid Parsons as editor of America had been preoccupied with the exploitation oflabor by the wealthy and powerful, Talbot's America focused its energies on fight ing communism. Parsons, for his part, had feared a reaction to com munism which, in a frenzied effort to protect property and class interests, could be so strong as to destroy American democracy itself. In Father Talbot's thinking, the greatest danger confronting both
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America as well as the Catholic Church was the Popular Front, a coalition against fascism which he believed was inspired and con trolled by the Bolsheviks as a means of bringing communism to the West.26 It was Comintern (Communist International) policy after 1935 to encourage alliances with bourgeois governments in West ern Europe. Stalin by this time recognized the importance of secur ing Russia from German invasion and therefore was determined to encourage a united front against all forms of fascism. However, the labor movement in Europe had already been working for a united front, well before Stalin joined the cause. Numerous working-class parties and associations throughout Europe and America supported the idea of a united front against fascism. It was clearly Stalin's in tention for the Comintern to control these efforts, yet with the exception of Spain, the Bolsheviks failed to completely dominate or control the various united front efforts; they had stiff competition from independent socialists, anarchists, liberals, and radical groups, many of whom did not accept the objectives of the Russian Revo lution. The majority of these elements were moderates who wanted change to occur gradually and only through parliamentary means. Certainly the communists were able to exert a good deal ofinfluence within the front's anti-fascist drive because of their organizational expertise, but it is an exaggeration to say that all Popular Front ac tivity was controlled by Moscow. Talbot contended that Marxism, abetted by American liberals, was swiftly infiltrating all areas of American life. Communists, he insisted, instigated labor unrest, directed the impetus for labor reform, had taken control of the liberal media, and were making great strides in the arts and theater.27 One of Father Talbot's major interests was the work of communists in Hollywood. In its "Comment" column of 19 March 1938, for example, America played up an anonymous advertisement published in the Hollywood Daily Reporter that was meant to be a gag about communists and their influence in the film industry. America inferred from the advertisement that Hollywood was indeed in "the closed fist of Communists." The editor of the Daily Reporter, W. R. Wilkerson, who was himself a Catholic, wrote to Talbot informing him of the satirical nature of the advertisement and expressing his concern that America's response might give the
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mistaken impression that the motion picture business was run by Marxists. The editor also approached Archbishop Cantwell of Los Angeles to express his concerns about the potential danger of the inferences made by America. Archbishop Cantwell concurred with Wilkerson that Hollywood communists were few in number and possessed negligible influence. Father Talbot wrote a revealing response to Mr. Wilkerson, setting the stage for the crusade he was orchestrating against com munism in America. Talbot said he published the advertisement because it was a confirmation of other evidence he had "on very good authority'' of subversive activity in the film industry. Although the author of the bogus advertisement had himself written Talbot (in a style that continued the joke) , and despite Wilkerson's clari fications, Talbot concluded that even though the advertisement may have been somewhat exaggerated, "is there not a great deal of truth" in what was said? "Has not there been a very definite attachment on the part of Hollywood, its producers, and its stars, to the Loyalist communist government of Spain?"28 Talbot cultivated connections with the extreme right in his cam paign against communism. One of his allies was George S. Viereck, a notorious Nazi sympathizer who wrote articles in a magazine called Liberty under the name of Donald Furthman Wickets. Viereck was indicted in 1941 as a German agent and spent four years in prison. In carrying out his work as a Hitler apologist, Viereck published information from someone he called "Comrade XYZ," a one-time party member, concerning communist activity that the House Com mittee on Un-American Activities had overlooked. According to Viereck, the communists had not only burrowed into the American government at the state and federal levels but had actually secured a foothold in President Roosevelt's cabinet. Communists had planted key agents in the railroad and shipping industries and in the utilities, and when Moscow gave the order they would tie up com munications and shut off power and light throughout America. Viereck claimed to have knowledge that laborers in the Works Progress Administration, which he called a communist-controlled front organization, were mixing explosives with their cement to blow up dams and roads "whenever the hour in Moscow strikes." In
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fact, Washington, wrote Viereck, was honeycombed with under ground secret passages, one leading straight from the headquarters of John L. Lewis (leader of the United Mine Workers' Union) to the White House, and Roosevelt himself had already "passed word" to the Comintern to assassinate his political enemies. These fright ening pictures of subversion painted in lurid detail by Viereck reached levels of the phantasmagoric, but in the view of America's editor, Viereck was performing a valuable journalistic service to the nation. Father Talbot congratulated Viereck on his "splendid" articles: "I am glad that Liberty shows such courage and would recommend its example to the other major publications of the U. S . who [sic] are pussyfooting on the real issues."29 In contrast to Father Talbot, Wilfrid Parsons' approach to the Popular Front issue was more measured and dispassionately ana lytical. Most significantly, he feared that an unbalanced, extreme reaction to its challenge would be dangerous to Catholics. Parsons pointed out that the appeal to join communism in the fight against fascism took on different forms according to the varying ways that countries had evolved historically. The challenge, in short, was dif ferent in Spain, France, and England. In America the debate was being framed by the Popular Front as a simple alternative between democracy and fascism, with the corollary assertion that opposing communism makes one a fascist and antidemocratic. This was the problem facing Catholics, who knew communism was a threat to their religion and, contrary to Popular Front propaganda, not a force for democracy. The Popular Front debate presented a false dilemma, for opposing communism did not mean forsaking democracy or lib eral ideas. The problem for Catholics, Parsons emphasized, was los ing a sense of proportion between the relative evils of communism and fascism, thereby blinding themselves to political reality. The dangers posed by the political right and left were different in character. Communism, Parsons insisted, was the greater threat to civilization because it was not simply a socioeconomic-political system but also a philosophy of life (diametrically opposed to Chris tianity) designed for export to other countries. Fascism was also an institution contrary to Christianity and democratic government, but it was primarily an extreme reaction to communism and had not
28 4 CATHOLIC I N T ELLECTUALS A N D T H E CHALLENGE O F D E M O C RACY
been packaged for resale in other countries. Consequently, Catho lics should oppose fascism on political and economic grounds in the name of democracy. Communism, on the other hand, should be rejected for political, economic, and religious reasons. Therefore, con cluded Parsons, Catholics must be united in convincing Americans that the alternatives are not fascism and democracy, but "democracy and all forms of totalitarianism, whether direct, as Communism, or Fascism, as the indirect result of Communism." Meanwhile, the Church should not abate its demands for social justice, especially in the industrial :field, which, because of the political ambitions of com munists, threatens to be abandoned by Catholics.30 Parsons' analy sis was similar to Father H . A. Reinhold's assessment of Marxism as the "legitimate offspring" of capitalism, and of fascism as the progeny of communism, and the two men shared remarkably simi lar views ofwhat the Church must do to :fight the evils of all three. 31 For Father Parsons, Catholics must oppose communism and fascism by adhering to American liberal democratic traditions. This imperative was not always paramount in his successor's policies and opinions. Talbot's America had a proclivity for linking liberalism with communism, and this shaped its attitude toward the New Deal. Indeed, Talbot's distaste for Roosevelt became so great that he saw fit to embrace the ideas of Father Charles Coughlin. Soon after Francis Talbot was appointed editor in 1936, America began finding positive things to say about Father Coughlin. In a pri vate letter to Rev. Patrick Dowd, O.P. , Talbot admitted that under his direction the paper had expressed approbation of the work that Coughlin had undertaken: we do not agree with all the facts as he alleges them, wrote Talbot, but "we heartily agree with his prin ciples."32 Coughlin's views by 1936 had become far more extreme than they were in 1935, when Father Parsons had criticized Coughlin. By 1938 Coughlin had become a peddler of hate, a raging anti-Semite, and an apologist for both Hitler and Mussolini.33 His movement had now become a focal point for American fascists. Like Hilaire Belloc, who became a regular contributor to the radio priest's Social justice, Coughlin had discovered a connection between Jews, plutoc racy, and communism.34 This certainly explains why Father Cough lin took such a keen interest in Hilaire Belloc. The disproportionate
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numbers ofJews in the :financial oligarchy and the many Jews who were Bolsheviks suggested an international conspiracy. As evidence of this conspiracy, Coughlin published the Protocols ofthe Elders of Zion, a notorious forgery by Russian anti-Semites that outlined a Jewish plan to take over the world.35 Jews, Coughlin claimed in a fashion that echoed Hilaire Belloc, were persecuted in Europe be cause of their affiliation with communism and their lack of patri otism. American Jews would suffer a similar fate, he warned, if their monopoly of the media continued to support the communist cause in Spain. Several of America's more conservative readers were quick to appreciate the shift in political orientation. Father Joseph A. Luther, S .J. , of the University of Detroit, wrote Talbot about his fears concerning intrigues by Archbishop Mundelein of Chicago and President Roosevelt together to persuade the Vatican to muzzle Coughlin by replacing his superior and protector, Bishop Michael Gallagher of Detroit.36 Talbot remarked that he too was disturbed by this possible turn of events. Father Luther was delighted with the breath of fresh air coming from the "new" America. Now it was time, said he, to convince people that the paper was permanently freed from the "reactionary mossbacked barnacled-studded days of Wil frid Parsons."37 By 1937 it was clearly evident that the magazine was allied with ultra-conservatism. Gerard ]. Murphy, S.J. , who wrote for the jour nal during the summer months of 1937 and fit in so well that he became America's literary editor for a time, made a strong plea for linking America with the cause of reaction. The "true conservatism'' with which Catholicism must ally itself, he argued, was best ar ticulated in Douglas Jerrold's English Review and Seward Collins' American Review. The former publication expressed a strong fond ness for Mussolini's corporatism and his adventures in Abyssinia; Collins had the distinction of having openly declared his magazine "Fascist. "38 A common theme that emerged inAmerica was that communism and liberalism were fellow materialistic philosophies, essentially "blood brothers tarred with the same atheistic smudge."39 Appar ently ignoring the Anglo-Saxon liberal traditions upon which the
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U. S . Constitution was constructed, America under Francis Talbot presented the issues of the 1930s in the framework of a Manichean struggle between Lucifer and Christ.40 Several prominent clergy strongly objected to America's move to the political right and its abandonment of labor causes.41 For in stance, Rev. Laurence K. Patterson, S.J., criticized Talbot for betray ing the magazine's earlier commitment to liberal social reform. Talbot, in response, attacked Patterson for building up a hostile campaign to unseat him as editor. A well-known labor activist, Father Owen Rice of the Pittsburgh Catholic Radical Alliance (a group of clergy and laymen committed to applying the social encyclicals to the American trade union movement), also objected to the general tenor of America's articles on trade unions. Father Rice wished to be allowed to write an essay in America stating the case for the CI0.42 In his early years Father Rice had developed a reputation as a tough-talking radical "labor priest" who was willing to take on all comers in the cause of furthering the interests of Catholic workers. He even crossed swords with Monsignor Fulton J. Sheen and Car dinal William O'Connell, the archbishop of Boston. O'Connell retaliated by barring Rice from speaking in the archdiocese. Initially Father Rice provided balanced critiques of capitalism and commu nism as he struggled to find the "third way," an alternative to both as outlined in the papal social encyclicals and championed by the Distributist movement. The Catholic Radical Alliance, said Rice, was "going to the roots" of the capitalist society by reintroducing the guild idea: "We are dissatisfied with the present Social and Eco nomic set up: we want it drastically changed."43 The Pittsburgh chapter of the ACTU, which Father Rice and his fellow "labor priest," Father Carl Hensler, had founded, worked closely with the CIO and the Catholic Worker movement and consulted with H. A. Reinhold (who was also instrumental in convincing Rice to forsake his commitment to pacifism) during its efforts to organize laborers in the steel and textile industries.44 Rice insisted that workers had a duty to join unions, which were their only hope against the per nicious designs of employers. Fathers Rice and Hensler were proud of the fact that their organization was at the forefront in fighting for labor. As to why they took the name "radical," Hensler said it was
American Catholics Move to the Right 28 7
only appropriate because "we advocate a program that is more radi cal than any other program of social reform."45 Another radical Catholic trade union group at odds with America's political orientation was associated with H. K. Kendall's Seattle-based magazine Social Action. Kendall's journal made bold attacks on the Catholic hierarchy's flirtation with fascist causes, in particular calling attention to the suppression of pertinent anti-Nazi news that was supposed to come through the National Catholic Welfare Conference News Service. Along with the Pittsburgh Catho lic, an outspoken supporter of Catholic trade unionism, Socia/Action published anti-fascist stories that the official Catholic news asso ciation refused to release. For this and other reasons the paper was criticized by Catholic conservatives. Kendall's paper would have made G. K. Chesterton proud, for there were precious few publications in America that paralleled more closely the policies and vision of G.K 's Weekly. Following the lead of Chesterton's journals and the Distributist movement, Social Action mounted furious attacks on "monopolistic capitalism," though like its British counterpart, the journal announced that it was only prepared to undermine the creed within the constitutional framework of the nation's legal system. As Kendall put it in a per sonal letter to his friend and mentor, Father Reinhold: We are in earnest about eliminating the present capitalist system just as much so as are the Communists. Only instead of estab lishing a Marxist collectivist socio-economic structure in the place of modern finance capitalism, we would set up a Co-operative, Distributist form of economic democracy that would guarantee the dignity of the human person, the sanctity of the family, per sonal responsibility through the restoration of property to the people, etc.-all so that men might the more easily gain eter nal salvation.46 Kendall's writings suggest that he was not only steeped in British Distributist ideas but also well acquainted with the French Per sonalist philosophy of Eduard Mournier, which had considerable influence on Peter Maurin, the liturgists at St. John's University, and
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the writings of Paul Hanley Furfey. Socia/Action's objective, claimed Kendall, was to work through the trade union movement, serving as a "a spark plug" for FDR's New Deal policies, making certain that they would be implemented with as many "Christian Distributist elements as possible." It might be more effective ifwe employed the sophisticated "New Yorker' style, claimed Kendall, but SocialAction lacked such talented writers and, in any case, could not afford the subtlety. For Catholics primarily and Christians generally, Social Action "in a miniature way" was to serve the same function as did the Daily Worker and the People's World for the misguided cause of com munism.47 While America and other conservative Catholic publications and clergy were mounting an energetic campaign against the CIO for its alleged communist tendencies, Fathers Rice and Hensler and progressives in the ACTU along with SocialAction were emphasiz ing what they considered to be a far more important issue, namely, the social injustice of employers. With respect to charges that the CIO was communist, Rice retorted that the notion was "ill-advised and asinine, especially when they come from Catholics. " These were claims, said Rice, that issued from smug, bourgeois Catho lics who were afraid of the workers gaining control of the means of production. 48 However, by the early 1940s even Father Rice was swept up in the anticommunist hysteria of the Catholic establishment. He be came increasingly conservative and for the most part subordinated his earlier commitment to Catholic social teachings to a war against Marxism. It was Rice who spearheaded the effort to purge com munists from the CI0.49 Father Talbot ultimately found an ally in Father Charles Owen Rice. The career of Father Charles Owen Rice is illustrative of a shift in American Catholicism from radical social reform to defense of the status quo. When Rice broadened his forum to become a radio priest in 1939 he brought into his program the ideas of Peter Mau rin, Dorothy Day, John Paul Furfey, John A. Ryan, and the liturgical views of H. A. Reinhold. These ideas faded when Rice joined the all-consuming struggle against communism.50 Dorothy Day spoke out against the frenzied CIO purges inspired by Rice (his broad-
American Catholics Move to the Right 28 9
sides were sweeping and disquieting, since Rice believed commu nists should be denied civil rights) but to no avail.51 In the view of Douglas P. Seaton, a historian of the Catholic trade union movement, the effect of the anticommunist crusade of Rice and others was not merely to remove communists from the CIO but to destroy the spirit of independent militancy the union greatly needed to make meaningful gains from the powerful capi talist establishment. Henceforth the fight for social justice would take a back seat to the struggle against communism. 52 In the long run, Catholic influence, argues Seaton, was a major reason why Ameri can industrial unionism became a force for conservatism. 53 One influential journal that failed to follow in the conservative trajectory of the Catholic mainstream was Commonweal. Talbot's political repositioning of America led to heated and bitter dis agreements with the editors of Commonweal. However, Talbot did everything he could to keep the feuds out of public view.54 What particularly provoked Talbot was Commonweal's falling under the control of Philip Skillin and his associates, who continued to sup port George Shuster's position that Catholics should maintain a position of neutrality on the Spanish Civil War. Talbot was con vinced that these dangerous liberal tendencies served to remove Commonweal from the Catholic fold: "Their training and present attitudes are not roo percent Catholic in our sense of the term."55 Despite Talbot's efforts at concealment, the squabbles between America and the Commonweal circle became more pronounced, spilling into the public domain because of the two journals' opposing interpre tations of the Spanish Civil War. Writing privately to Commonweal's founder and former editor Michael Williams, who lost out to Shus ter's group in the struggles over the journal's Spanish policy, Talbot suggested that Commonweal as well as the Catholic Worker (which also refused to endorse the Spanish Civil War as a crusade for Christ) should be investigated by the Catholic Press Association. These are times, said he, that members of that assembly must either express themselves in a Catholic way (as defined by Father Talbot) or cease to call themselves Catholic. 56 Father Talbot's anticommunist campaign also targeted H. A. Reinhold indirectly. Reinhold's sympathies and close association
290 CAT H O L I C I NT E LLECTUALS AND T H E CHALLENGE O F D E M O C RACY
with progressive and radical elements in the American labor move ment and his connections with liberal Catholics, including his friends at Commonweal, made him a person of questionable character in the eyes of Catholics like Father Francis Talbot.57 By the late 1930s Reinhold's liturgical ideas, as well as his refusal to embrace Franco, opened him to public attack by Patrick Scanlan's Brooklyn Tablet. Scanlan was always on the hunt for communist agents. Unlike most Catholic social activists, Scanlan refused to accept the idea that communism as a political force was encouraged by social and eco nomic oppression. For him, the spread of Marxism was the result of alien intrusion: it was directly brought to America through Rus sian agents. If the government could suppress communist propa ganda and deport aliens, the "red peril" would largely disappear. 58 The attacks on Father Reinhold continued unabated, eventually convincing him of the wisdom of disassociating from groups labeled by conservative Catholics as "untrustworthy'' or with "socialist ten dencies." In the end, fearing such right-wing assaults would com promise his application for American citizenship, Reinhold painfully severed his affiliations with Catholic trade union activists and other such reformers who relied on his advice and inspiration. 59 The attacks on Reinhold had a chilling effect on his frankness about speaking out against social and political evils. In the future, if an organization to which he belonged or person with whom he had a professional relationship was placed under the suspicion of having connections with communist groups , Reinhold severed his affili ation. These tactics, of course, served to silence what the right-wing Catholics called the "liberal party'' functioning illicitly within the Church, liberal in this case being a code word for "Red." Such was the case with Reinhold's association with the Committee of Catho lics for Human Rights (CCHR) , an organization formed in 1939 to fight anti-Semitism. Its board of directors included Senator James E. Murray, Bishop Joseph M. Gilmore of Helena, Montana, Bishop Francis H. Haas of Grand Rapids, Michigan, Bishop Bernard J. Sheil of Chicago, and John Brophy, director of the CI 0 Industrial Councils, among other Catholic luminaries . The CCHR published a monthly called the Voice, which stood as a forum for rational discussion and toleration among the pro-
American Catholics Move to the Right 291
fascist and oblique anti-Semitic ramblings found in a good many Catholic papers at the time, in particular Scanlan's Brooklyn Tablet, Coughlin's Social justice, and Bishop Noll's Our Sunday Visitor, which claimed to have the largest circulation of any Catholic dioce san paper in America. The Voice's executive board included Mon signor John A. Ryan and Reverend Paul Hanley Furfey. The paper had a large circulation that ranged from 60,000 to 120,000, reach ing some no cities throughout America. The founder and chairman of the Committee of Catholics for Human Rights was Professor Emmanuel Chapman of Hunter College. Chapman was attacked by the New Leader in October 1946 for being a communist. The assault continued in Gerald L. K. Smith's The Cross and the Flag and in the Brooklyn Tablet, where Joseph Corriden accused the CCHR of being a communist front organization and its honorary chairman, Senator James E. Murray, of being soft on Reds. Within a month of these attacks, Father Reinhold wrote Chap man to say that he was obliged, out of self-protection, to abrogate his ties with the CCHR. Long before the appearance of Senator Joseph McCarthy and the witch hunts of the 1950s, Father Rein hold had detected the emergence of a sinister tendency in Ameri can politics, a phenomenon uncomfortably close to the experience he had had in another land: "Something is shaping up in this coun try," wrote Reinhold, "either planned or just by accident which looks to me rather familiar in spite of its definitely American outward symptoms."60
C HAPT E R 12
The Religious Crusade in Spain Infact, to the writer it seems that the whole world is suffering from some kind efpsychosis efexcess nationalism and deficiency efcalm thought, and to him this explains at least in part the cocksureness with which statements are made pro and con on so many questions by both Catholic and non-Catholics. St. Augustine said long ago: "I hold that one never errs more surely than when he errs as the result efan excessive love ef truth or an excessivefear iffalling into error. " -Virgil MicheP
T
he outbreak of the Spanish Civil War in July 1936 created a deep moral crisis for European and American Catholics, both in terms of its effect on political consensus within intellectual ranks and in terms of the negative public image it cre ated for the Church. 2 The strident American Catholic campaign for Franco and its related attacks on liberalism, for example, earned the Church the dubious distinction of winning second place (ahead of the Ku Klux Klan and Nazi agencies) in the 1937 American Civil Liberties Union's poll ofinstitutions that most threatened individual freedoms. Beginning in the same year, several notable American and British Protestant theologians and publications became openly critical of the Catholic Church for what appeared to be its interna tional alliance with the forces of Fascism. The journalist Herbert Matthews held that the Spanish Civil War had divided America along religious and political lines for the first and only time in U. S . history. 3 Pro-Franco Catholic opinion may have played a decisive role in the Roosevelt administration's decision to maintain an arms embargo on Spain, thus helping to assure a Nationalist victory.4
The Religious Crusade in Spain 2 93
After a large anti-monarchist vote in the Spanish municipal election in April 1931, King Alfonso XIII relinquished the throne and transferred power to a provisional government which intro duced a republic. The first government of the Second Spanish Republic was made up of a coalition of diverse republican parties and socialists . The regime seems to have had the support of the majority of politically conscious Spaniards.5 In city plazas and on parade grounds, cries of vivas for the Republic and strains of the "Marseillaise" were heard throughout the land. This popular enthu siasm for democracy was encouraging, given Europe's current drift toward authoritarianism. Those in support of the change in gov ernment closely identified it with the legacy of 1789, though, in contrast, Spanish republicans could claim that their king had left peacefully and that the revolutionaries had agreed beforehand to an equitable distribution of power. In actuality, the transition was fraught with tensions and bitter emotions stemming from intense regional aspirations, from industrial and agrarian struggles, and, very significantly, from anger against the Catholic Church, which in the popular mind was associated with the privileges and oppression of the old order. Spain had been dominated by a landed aristocracy and a small cadre of industrialists who assiduously resisted economic and political reform. The fact that the Republic was supported by con siderable numbers of peasants and factory workers imbued the ensu ing conflict with the tones of class war. The ownership ofland in Spain was in the hands of a small group of aristocrats and wealthy bourgeoisie (who were given the opportu nity to purchase confiscated Church properties under nineteenth century Liberal governments) The landless peasants were brutally exploited.6 Adding to this volatile brew was the rapid industriali zation of a few key areas of Spain (Catalonia and the Basque Prov inces) . 7 The inability of the growing numbers of working poor to protect their interests against the extortionate claims of capitalist financiers and industrialists made them receptive to a wide range of radical, revolutionary social ideas. Much of the peasant/prole tarian unrest that grew out of this situation took on distinctly anti clerical tones, owing to the Church's close association with the economic elites and its own reluctance to encourage economic and social reforms.
2 94 CATHOLIC I N T ELLECTUALS AND T H E CHALLENGE O F D E M O C RACY
The Spanish Church offers striking parallels with the French Church at the time of the French Revolution. However, as an insti tution and in terms of its economic role in society, the Spanish Church was far different from its eighteenth-century Gallican counterpart. Following the confiscation of Church property known as the desamortizacion, begun under the Liberal government of Prime Minister Alfredo Mendizabal in 1835, the Church ceased to be the country's largest landowner. In compensation, and in order to be able to liquidate its holdings in the face of possible future hos tile action, the Church including various religious orders, in par ticular the Jesuits, began investing in other forms of wealth. 8 By the 1930s they had accumulated enormous amounts of mobile property in the form of capital investments. Many believed that the Spanish Church had become the country's single richest shareholder.9 The desamortizacion had profound consequences. Although the move was engineered by Liberals hoping to break up the power and entrenched privileges of the Church, only those of considerable wealth could afford to purchase the confiscated property. Thus the transactions had the effect of increasing the wealth and power of Spain's elites and further retarding the emergence of a rural middle class. The desamortizacion also tended to make those wealthy Lib erals who purchased religious property increasingly dependent on maintaining the new order, hence becoming in the long run wed ded to the status quo. It is important to point out, moreover, that the desamortizacion affected not only Church property but also public owned common land. The mass dispossession of poor peasants from municipal land led to the emergence of a surplus population, soon to be transformed into a new proletariat. Along with the rural masses, the industrial laborers represented a formidable revolution ary bloc against the Spanish industrial and agricultural oligarchy. The loss of the Church's landed revenues meant that it was obliged to become heavily dependent on the ruling class for eco nomic support. In return, the clergy assumed a more partisan, elitist position on social and economic issues, alienating themselves fur ther from the masses. Consequently, as the hierarchy jockeyed to garner other forms of capital wealth and preserve its privileges, the Church became increasingly committed to perpetuating the arrange-
The Religious Crusade in Spain 2 95
ments of oligarchy.10 Even the conservative Catholic writer Jose Maria Gironella, in his epic novel The Cypresses Believe in God, dramatized this fact. The hero, a fictional projection of Gironella by the name of lgnacio Olvear, in an exchange with the priest Mosen Alberto, who could not understand why people would use violence against the Church, tells Alberto that the clergy's lives have been too completely disconnected from the lowly, too unaware of the working class and the needy: "it was friendship that was needed."11 Politically, the Spanish Church served as the ideological bulwark of monarchy and was intimately connected to it. Prior to 1931, canonical law and civil law existed side by side. Religious indiffer ence was a civil offense, bishops were nominated by the monarch (generally only those with unquestioned loyalty to the ruling elites were appointed), and all ecclesiastics were paid by the state.12 What little affection the common people may have felt for an institution so closely allied to an oppressive ruling establishment quickly dissipated when the leaders of the Spanish Church attacked the idea of the Republic and urged the masses to vote against it.13 This call for resistance, however, was the product of class bias. The episcopate, being closely allied with the oligarchy, was largely opposed to the Republic. However, as noted by William F. Montovan of the National Catholic Welfare Conference (NCWC), a close observer of the Spanish situation, the majority of the clergy below the rank of bishop supported the new experiment in democracy.14 As director of the legal department of the NCWC, Montovan was sent to Spain in 1931 to observe the formation of the new gov ernment. Montovan concluded at the time that the Republicans had wide popular support and were committed to constitutional reform.15 His confidential report to the Vatican on the Spanish situation was unusual for its dispassionate objectivity. Montovan noted the seri ousness of the Church's failure to support long overdue social and political reforms, and he was especially critical of the decision of Catholics to withdraw from the constituent Cortes after the approval of anticlerical articles. The refusal of Catholic politicians to push for change within this legally-established political institution and thereby to protect Church interests, wrote Montovan, was an "act of cowardice . . . by men who were amateurs in statesmanship; it was
2 9 6 CATHOLIC I N T ELLECTUALS A N D T H E CHALLENGE OF D E M O C RACY
an unpatriotic betrayal of a responsibility to the nation solemnly accepted with election."16 Montovan's report to the Vatican pointed out that Catholic opinion was divided regarding social, economic, and political reforms. Therefore it was incumbent upon Catholic leaders, wrote Montovan, to formulate a program that could forge consensus. A major problem in this regard was the failure of the Spanish bishops to encourage Catholic action along lines set forth in the papal social encyclicals. In what must be seen as a damning indictment of the Spanish hierarchy, Montovan averred that reform had begun "at the wrong end." The Cardinal Primate had written a constitution for Catholic action. The archbishops gave it their imprimatur and sent copies to the suffragan bishops. There the effort died.17 Montovan concluded that the organization for Catho lic social action must begin where it would receive popular support: at the individual parish level.18 Perhaps Montovan's most significant recommendation to the Vatican was that Spanish Catholics must take the responsibility of working for reforms through the elected bodies of the Republic. Of critical importance, he suggested, was the presence of an intelligent Catholic opposition (staking out a moderate ground that could appeal to voters) in the public sectors of Spanish life.19 William Montovan's report should not have been a great sur prise, for the institutional malaise of Spanish Catholicism was fre quently commented upon by visitors to that country. Sir Peter Chalmers Mitchell, who lived in Malaga before and during the Civil War, wrote that "it was odd, to English eyes, to find that the parish priesthood was simply a privileged bourgeois profession, doing nothing for parishioners except exacting fees for ceremonies or rites deemed necessary." In no country, noted Mitchell, had he ever seen such a vast contrast between the poverty of the poor and the luxury of the rich, the latter of whom were carefully tended by the Church. 20 Virgil Michel traveled through Spain in 1924-25 and made it a point to talk extensively with people from all walks of life. He read the local newspapers and studied Spanish culture with consummate care. His diary during this period highlights the yawning gap between ordinary people and the Church hierarchy. The higher Spanish clergy, he observed, lived in lavish luxury in close alliance
The Religious Crusade in Spain 2 97
with the ruling classes and large landowners. They were wholly ignorant of both the condition of the laboring masses and the papal social teachings. His entry for 20 June 1925 reads: Priests in Spain do not go after stray sheep. Religious education of people is wanting. Thus fewer real vocations, and others enter the priesthood because a living is assured from the government. Priests do not know who belongs or should belong to the parish. Bishops confirm when they please; go about with retinue, some times do not get to certain places for rn-15 years.21 On the other hand, Father Michel was highly impressed by the religiosity and social activism he observed among the Basque clergy. The priests in this part of Spain were well schooled in the labor encyclicals and their religious houses overflowed with vocations.22 Yet social and economic conditions in the rest of Spain were so abysmal that Michel claimed it almost shocked him into embrac ing the visceral message of radical socialism. 23 Indeed, so powerful were these experiences that Virgil Michel's biographer believes they may have been a seminal factor in the development of his positions on Catholic social action and liturgical renewal.24 The religious and economic situation in Spain was a topic upon which Virgil Michel spoke frequently after his return to the United States. For him, the outbreak of civil war in 1936 was not unexpected.25 Although Spain was known as "the most Catholic of all the nations," vast numbers of the population failed to practice their reli gion.26 Much of this was a direct consequence of the Church's fail ure to provide confessional and educational leadership. Even in the most Catholic provinces of Navarre and Catalonia many villages lacked schools. In Andalusia, for example, 45 percent of the people were illiterate. One well-placed and influential student of Catholic culture observed that there were few Spaniards who knew anything at all about Catholicism.27 The leadership ranks of the Spanish Church were top-heavy and constituted a considerable drain on the limited economic resources of the state, whereas parish clergy were abysmally remunerated. The Catholic journalist Lawrence Farnsworth wrote that he frequently encountered sixteen to twenty
2 9 8 CAT H O L I C I N T ELLECTUALS AND T H E CHALLENGE OF D E M O C RACY
high-ranking ecclesiastics at modest funerals, each collecting a size able fee: ''And how many times have I walked into some cathedral to :find a solemn or a pontifical mass being celebrated in all liturgical pomp with the assistance of the entire cathedral chapter and in the presence of only 3 or 4 of the faithful."28 A devout Spanish Catholic academic, Enrique Moreno, con cluded that his countrymen had become indifferent to Catholic culture. As a frequenter of ancient cathedrals, Moreno noted that High Mass was often celebrated before no more than two or three parishioners .29 He also commented on the failure of the educa tional mission of the Jesuits, who controlled the curricula of 50 per cent of Spanish universities.30 According to Jose Maria de Sempnin Guerra-a lecturer in the philosophy of law at the University of Madrid, a leading member of the Conservative Party, and founder and long-time contributor to the Spanish Catholic review Cruz y Raya at least 80 percent of Spanish middle-class youth had been educated in Catholic colleges yet knew nothing of the theological traditions of their religion. 31 Sempnin Guerra had been educated at a religious college and left after six years of uninterrupted attendance without acquiring more than a vague idea of Pascal's Pensees, with out having read more than a few extracts of Saint Teresa, scarcely knowing the significance of the writings of the Church fathers, and without having read the Gospels in their entirety. 32 Clearly, the clergy's association with the landholding classes served as a formidable obstacle to economic reform. It has been esti mated that at the beginning of the nineteenth century the Church owned roughly one-third of Spanish national territory; the hierarchy was naturally embittered by the efforts at land redistribution en forced by liberal politicians. Churchmen came to identify opposi tion to these liberal efforts with defense of the Catholic social order represented in their latifundios. As a consequence of this linkage of religion with property, the Spanish public suspected that there were always economic motives at the base of Church attitudes. The pub lic associated the clergy with the defense of an unjust social order and hence included them as the enemies of their liberties. For its part, the Spanish Church associated liberal reforms and all things modern with foreign influences. This linkage stemmed in large part -
The Religious Crusade in Spain 299
from what the Spanish Church viewed as the Rousseauistic evils of the French Revolution: evil foreign influences designed to destroy national culture.33 The Spanish Church's attitude toward liberal ism was aptly summed up by Reverend Genadius Diez, O.S.B. The "French influence," Rev. Diez claimed, invaded not only the throne and aristocracy but also the class of men who posed as "intellectu als." Only the Church and lower classes, he argued, remained men tally and spiritually loyal to the "Spain of the Reconquest," i.e., to that of Ferdinand and Isabella. The word "liberal," wrote Diez, meant in Spain far more than "progressive views"; it was rather a revolutionary attempt to undermine moral ethics and theology and to bring about the absolute domination of the Church by the state. Today, insisted Rev. Diez, liberalism means the same as anarchism, communism, and socialism. 34 The reactionary bent of the Spanish Church had engendered a long tradition of anticlericalism that was frequently accompanied by mass violence. Contrary to the assumptions of many conserva tive American and British Catholics, unbridled anger against the Church and its association with the organs of oppression certainly was not something sparked by the anti-God revolution in Moscow and nor was it unique to the twentieth century. As the Spanish writer Ramos Oliveira observed: The people began withdrawing their support from an institu tion which could reform nothing because it stood in need itself of a sweeping reform. In 1834, there occurred the first murder of friars in Madrid, and the following year saw a repetition of the disorders. Already convents were burning in Barcelona, Saragossa, Reus and Murcia.35
II
The Second Spanish Republic was politically unstable from the moment ofits inception. Both the aristocracy and wealthy bourgeoisie as well as the major groups representing lower-class interests were
JOO CATHOLIC I N T ELLECTUALS AND T H E CHALLENGE OF D E M O C RACY
dissatisfied with it. The Republic's main source of support came from moderate republicans with democratic and liberal leanings. From the outset the new government made a serious mistake in fail ing to address land reform as the first order of business, focusing instead on legislation to secularize the state. This approach served to exacerbate ill feelings among nearly all parties. In June 1933 Presi dent Niceto Alcala Zamora (a practicing Catholic), following the wishes of the Cortes, signed the Law of Religious Denominations and Congregations, a sweeping effort to prohibit Catholic educa tional, industrial, and commercial activities and to nationalize Church property. Many Spanish Catholics were outraged, and even Pope Pius XI felt it his duty to denounce the legislation, calling upon Spaniards to unite and remove the dangers that threatened their spiritual and civil welfare. Those on the Left were also dissatisfied with the performance of the new government. A timid agrarian reform law angered peas ants, and failure to address working-class needs fanned urban unrest. Insurrections in the countryside and urban violence forced the gov ernment to call on the military to restore order. By the summer of 1933 it had become clear that the moderate republican cabinet, hav ing alienated Catholics and the laboring masses, could no longer govern. New elections were called for November 1933 · The forces of the Right prevailed in the 1933 national elections. In terms of satisfying the nation's social and political needs, how ever, the triumph of conservatism brought no more success than had the pro-republican elements in 1931. The pro-Church politician Jose Maria Gil Robles, who hoped to put together a coalition of rightist groups in the new government-based on an umbrella party called CEDA (Confederaci6n Espanola des Derechas Aut6nomas)-was unable to effect any constructive change, in part because his part ners were committed to maintaining the status quo. The limited reforms of the previous government were quickly reversed. CEDA, the most influential grouping on the Right, was a party of moderate Catholic opinion, and many of its members were pre pared to support the Republic. Essentially, CEDA pursued a pol icy called "accidentalism": to CEDA, the forms of government were immaterial provided they protected Catholic interests. The orga-
The Religious Crusade in Spain 301
nization called for a restoration of "the religious rights" of the Church and the inauguration of a social program along the lines set forth by Rerum Novarum and QuadragesimoAnno. Following through on the papal labor encyclicals, however, would have required a redis tribution of landed wealth and industrial reform favoring workers. Since CEDA'.s bankers were chiefly the landed oligarchy, the redis tribution of land and other pertinent social reforms that the party called for never went beyond rhetorical flourish and served mainly as a verbal tactic to win proletarian and peasant support. Although CEDA'.s republicanism was ambiguous and at best faint-hearted, the party was very clear about its Catholic agenda: the restoration of the Church to its former position of dominance. Another problem was Gil Robles himself. He was a political opportunist who was never completely trusted by republicans on his left, nor, because he thought in terms of a movement willing to accommodate disparate groups of moderate liberal and conservative opinion, could he manage to win the complete confidence of the Right. Although Robles claimed he was supportive of the Repub lic and for the most part was a man of reasonable and tempered views, his rhetoric, carefully crafted to appease his right-wing con stituents, frightened republicans of every stripe. "For us," declared Robles, "democracy is a means, not an end . . . . When the time arrives, [the Cortes] will submit to us or we will do away with it."36 On many occasions Robles used language that suggested he favored fascism. In October 1934 Asturias and Catalonia erupted in a fiery leftist led rebellion against what was called the "fascist" government of CEDA. The rebels were in no sense united except in anger.37 Al though the so-called "Red" October Revolution was defeated, the violence that marked the affair had the effect of making all parties on the Left, especially the socialists who heretofore had been mod erate and even legalistic in their tactics, more uncompromising and sanguine about the efficacy of armed revolt. The most serious up heaval, in the words of Franz Borkenau, "more heroic than any working-class rising since the days of the Paris commune,"38 occurred in Asturias . Socialists with the help of anarchists took the lead. They set up a Soviet-style regime and began a massive
302 CATHOLIC I NT E LLECTUALS AND T H E CHALLENGE O F D E M O C RACY
campaign of terror against their enemies. The government was able to subdue this working-class uprising only by calling in the elite For eign Legionaries and Moorish troops. The repression appears to have been even more gruesomely cruel than the uprising itsel£ In the words of a conservative republican and avid foe of the Left: "The accused were tortured in jails; prisoners were executed without trial in the courtyards of the barracks, and eyes were closed to the per secutions and atrocities committed by the police during these six teen months."39 The heroic resistance of the rebels and the vicious counteraction by the rightist government created martyrs, new leaders (Dolores Ibarruri, the famous "La Passionaria," began her meteoric rise to fame during the uprising in Asturias), and a legacy of revolution that would serve as a catalyst for future action. Indeed, most historians of the Spanish Civil War trace the dissolution of the Second Repub lic, the beginning ofits grisly unraveling, to the October Revolution of 1934· In effect, the Left had revolted against a legally elected gov ernment. 40 The Right would replicate this behavior in 1936. The armed combat served to draw together the multiplicity of factions on the Left in defense of the 1934 revolution: the republi cans now saw the necessity of allying in electoral battle with social ists. This led to the emergence of the "Popular Front," a coalition of republicans, socialists, and, with Moscow's approval, the Spanish communists. Communist participation was made possible by the Comintern's volte-face in mid-1935, when it decided to support al liances with liberal-bourgeois parties advancing revolution in the developing world. 41 Even the anarchists realized that their best hopes lay with the electoral success of the Left; they too decided to support the Popular Front.42 The decision of a sizeable bloc of anar chists to reverse their previous policy of electoral abstention was vital for the Popular Front: it won the election of February 1936. Yet as in 1931, the new government of the Left, in the hands of liberal and moderate republicans led by Premier Manuel Azafia (the socialists and anarchists gave the government their votes but refused to par ticipate in it), failed to find common agreement on land reform. The liberal republican proposals for change were stymied by the more radical ideas of socialist and anarchist elements. In frustration, the
The Religious Crusade in Spain 3 03
peasant masses soon took things into their own hands and, in rebel lion against the old regime, began seizing land. Workers through out Spain engaged in a series of crippling strikes and attacks on property. Azafia condemned the acts of violence in the Cortes, but his government was powerless to temper the revolutionary rage of the workers and peasants.43 Meanwhile, a rejuvenated Right prepared to challenge the new order. The government's inability to throttle anarchy-anarcho syndicalists released from prison, for example, had immediately resorted to violence against their enemies-convinced many that brute force was the only solution to Spain's problems. The most influential leader on the Right, Gil Robles of CEDA, found it impossible to staunch the radicalization of conservative opinion. Indeed, once Gil Robles reiterated his opposition to violence and commitment to work through the established political structures of the Republic, the CEDA began to disintegrate. There was a mas sive defection of Robles' followers to the Renovaci6n Espanola (a party of monarchist and Catholic integralists) and, even more omi nously, to the Falange, the Spanish fascist party led by Jose Antonio Primo de Rivera that drew heavily on the programs of Mussolini and Hitler. In the minds of those who trembled from the volcanic eruption of assassinations, illegal seizures of land, and violence against property and persons, only one path offered security: the dic tatorship of fascism. In the words of Augustin Calvet, director of La Vanguardia: "almost without realizing it, the people 'feel' them selves fascist. Of the inconvenience of a dictatorship they know nothing . . . . Of these they will learn later. . . . But meanwhile they see in that form of strong government nothing more than an infal lible means of shaking off the insufferable vexations of the existing lawlessness."44 The spreading anarchic violence against established order con vinced influential, high-ranking officers in the army that they must move quickly or be overcome by a massive popular uprising. On the 17th ofJuly 1936 the Spanish military declared war against the government. The coup d'etat (pronunciamiento) had the imme diate effect of unifying the Left in support of the Republic. The masses-poor peasants, the urban working classes, and the "little"
3 04 CAT H O L I C I N T E LLECTUALS AND T H E CHALLENGE OF D E M O C RACY
people-rose in ferocious anger against the Right. Such popular insurrection could not be controlled by the government. In both Madrid and Barcelona armed workers overcame the military and, through the establishment of their own defense committees, became the real source of power. The generals' revolt against the Republic, which they called the Movimiento Nacional or Alzamiento, achieved what had eluded the socialists and anarchists since r93r: it brought to power in half of Spain and in almost all its larger cities a revolu tionary proletariat.45 In many regions sympathetic to the Republic a sweeping social revolution followed that was even more far-reaching than what the Bolsheviks had accomplished in r9r7- It was not a result desired by the Popular Front, and indeed was actively resisted by many Popu lar Front members in positions of influence. The commitment of radicals on the Left to bring a Marxist revolution to Spain by any means necessary now openly confronted the ultra-Right's equally zealous commitment to fascist-style dictatorship.46 Little space was left for moderates in the Popular Front government who wished to save the constitution of the Republic. In a last-ditch effort to en courage army officers to negotiate, and thereby defuse the socialist communist-anarchist endeavors to organize their own militias and arm the citizenry, Azafia, recently made President of the Republic, asked Diego Martinez Barrio, leader of the most moderate elements in the Popular Front, to form a new, more conservative government. The Republic's efforts to negotiate with the rebels failed: General Emilio Mola, the man who initiated the pronunciamiento, claimed that his men would overthrow his own leadership if he entertained compromise. The hour was too late. "Neither of us," said Mola to Prime Minister Martinez Barrio, "can now control the masses."47 The government of the Republic that rose to defend Spain against the generals was indeed powerless to throttle the social revo lution. It should come as no surprise, given the popular anger at the Church's alliance with the legions of reaction and the absence of government defense forces, that terrible violence was unleashed against organized religion. At no time in European history or even, perhaps, in that of the world, noted the historian Hugh Thomas, had such hatred been shown toward religion and all its works.48
The Religious Crusade in Spain 3 05 III
A seminal figure providing inspiration and ideological focus for British and American Catholic intellectuals of the Right who gave their services to the Insurgents (or Nationalists, as they were called by supporters) in the Spanish Civil War was Hilaire Belloc. 49 How ever, the man who had such considerable influence on subsequent Catholic opinion on Spain appeared to be confused initially by the issues. From the outset Belloc was at least superficially appreciative of the deep-seated class struggle at the core of the conflict. Writ ing to his son in the summer of 1936, Belloc identified as the basic problem in Spain the fact that peasants did not possess their own land (a consequence of the elites' resistance to reform) and that a revolutionary industrial proletariat were denied their just rewards by greedy capitalists. 50 In various articles in British political journals Belloc had argued that the revolt against industrial capitalism was the spiritual inspiration behind the Republic, which represented an economic and social system wholly unsuited, in his opinion, to the traditions of Spain. Moreover, as he had recognized in the case of the French Revolution, the Church was attacked because it had lost its vitality and was associated with the the interests of the rich.51 Yet, as Belloc put it, this was only "half of the truth." He was convinced that the spiritual force behind the Republic was not indigenous, for he did not believe that the revolt had proceeded from the victims of industrialism themselves. It was rather managed as a "crusade" from without, its chief point of attack being the Catho lic Church.52 For Belloc, the catalyst was the Communist Party, an organization which everywhere claimed to represent the will of the national proletariat but which, in fact, was completely at the orders of Moscow. In the final analysis, Soviet involvement in the Span ish Civil War and what he deemed the Soviet intentions for world revolution brought Belloc down firmly on the side of the Nation alists. The Republic's inspiration was an anti-capitalism controlled by Moscow; the general who quickly emerged to lead the Nation alists, Francisco Franco, possessed a spiritual energy driven by a spe cial Spanish patriotism and by an allegiance to Catholic tradition which, Belloc believed, was triggered by foreign intervention.
3 06 CAT H O L I C I NTELLECTUALS AND T H E CHALLENGE OF D E M O C RACY
Belloc was convinced that the Spanish Civil War was the king pin of a "new revolution'' engineered by Moscow and its secret allies that was engulfing Europe and threatening the core of Christian culture. Its first objective was the uprooting of Catholicism, a pre liminary to the substitution of communism for private proprietor ship and the elimination of the family. The Bolsheviks had conducted a rampage of terror against the Russian clergy designed to eliminate Christianity altogether, since it constituted an island of separateness not allowed in a totalitarian regime, and now the process was under way in Spain.53 Belloc noted similar attempts in Italy, Germany, Hungary, and Poland, though these were checked by the "counter offensive," by which he meant fascism.54 In Belloc's assessment the Bolsheviks were assisted in their efforts to destroy Spain by two other forces: international Jewry and Freemasonry. Belloc, of course, had long believed in a direct con spiratorial linkage between Jews, Masons, and Spanish sociopoliti cal problems,55 and he had warned as early as l9IO ofimpending civil war.56 The conspiracy was broadened, in his mind, when Jews engi neered the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917· Belloc asserted that the Jews were especially well suited for destabilizing nationalist gov ernments (for instance, the Spanish revolution was being directed, he argued, by Moses Rosenberg, nominally the Soviet ambassador, and France was under the leadership of another Jew, Leon Blum), since they had a natural capacity for such matters: Jews were detached both from the patriotic sentiment of the various European ethnic groups and from the traditions of Christendom, and thus were indifferent to the destruction of each. Spain was vital in this re gard, for it represented the last in a series of Bolshevik efforts to destroy Christianity as a necessary step toward absorbing the whole of Europe. 57 The Freemasons contributed to this tripartite revolutionary con spiracy, claimed Belloc, by directing their highly-placed agents in the Republican government to secretly incite mob action against Church property. As Belloc wrote during the 1909 Barcelona upris ing, "Not a single case of violence was directed against the house of a capitalist or upon any great capitalist work or bank."58 Contrary to what gullible English newspapers had reported, there was nothing spontaneous about such acts of disdain for religion. It was, Belloc
The Religious Crusade in Spain 3 07
asserted, simply a ruse by the authorities to produce popular hatred against religion. A major factor that conditioned Belloc's analysis of the Spanish situation was the Comintern's advocacy, noted earlier, of a united front to oppose the forces of fascism. Recognizing the threat posed by Hitler, the Seventh Congress of the Comintern (Communist International), which gathered in August 1935, deter mined that it was necessary to collaborate with bourgeois parties. The goal was to infiltrate such organizations in order to transform them into tools for communist revolution. The idea was developed by Stalin and publicly introduced by the Bulgarian General Secretary of the Comintern, Georgi Dimitrov: Cannot we endeavor to unite the Communist, Social Democratic, Catholic and other workers? Comrades, you will remember the ancient tale of the capture of Troy. The attacking army was unable to achieve victory until, with the aid of the Trojan Horse, it penetrated to the very heart of the enemy camp. We, revo lutionary workers, should not be shy of using the same tactics. 59 The Trojan Horse idea convinced Belloc that Moscow's aid to the Republic, the rapid growth in Spanish Communist Party mem bership, 60 and its collaboration with Popular Front parties were part and parcel of the blueprint for world revolution.61 The Comintern's new program was enormously successful in Spain. Their carefully calculated "moderate policies" (designed to look respectable to the middle classes), an insistence on stopping anarchist revolution in the countryside, and the fact that their allies, the Soviets, had the guns needed by the Republic, were all sufficient reasons to attract a myr iad of elements into the communist fold, most of whom had never read a word of Marx. In fact, many Spaniards joined the Commu nist Party as a means of stopping the Republic's social revolution.62 "Representative government," a polity Moscow had decided to cul tivate and which Belloc, from his own experiences in England, had long denounced for its corruptive tendencies, seemed the ideal spawning ground for the Comintern's Trojan Horse program. Just as the French Revolution had its heroes in Danton, Robes pierre, and Napoleon, so the Spanish Republic, for Belloc, had a hero who symbolized in his person the Christian crusade in Spain.
3 08 CATHOLIC I NTELLECTUALS A N D T H E CHALLENGE O F D E M O C RACY
This hero was General Francisco Franco, who had assumed con trol of the rebellion against Spain's democratically elected Repub lic. Here was a leader, in Belloc's mind, who had the qualities of both a Charlemagne and a Napoleon. Central to Belloc's lionization of Franco was his belief that the general had the popular and moral support of the Spanish people. Belloc also insisted that the masses were behind the Church. 63 In short, Belloc regarded Franco, like Napoleon, as the repository of the general will, a force incapable of manifesting itself through the diseased parliamentary government of the Republic. Franco would save Western civilization, just as his predecessors rescued Christendom from the yoke of Islam. After having made a personal visit to the Nationalist front line in 1939 where he had a private interview with his hero, Belloc was moved to write the following panegyric: When I entered Franco's presence I entered the presence of one who had fought that same battle wherein Roland oflegend died fighting, and Godfrey in sober history had won, when his bat tered remnant, a mere surviving tenth of the first crusaders, entered Jerusalem. They came in on foot, refusing to ride where God and man had offered up the Sacrifice of Golgotha. 64 In Belloc's public commentaries on the Spanish Civil War there was nary a hint of any parallels with the French Revolution and the related issue of class struggle. The probing economic and sociopo litical analyses that undergirded his earlier books on Robespierre, Danton, Napoleon, and the French Revolution itself, are notably missing in his writings on Spain. One of Belloc's admirers, Arnold Lunn, who was studying the older man's writings on the French Revolution, could not help but notice striking parallels between what Belloc said about France's his tory and what was presently occurring in Spain. Lunn had started with a strong bias against the French Revolution and was perplexed at Belloc's enthusiasm for it. Lunn wrote Belloc and asked if he had changed his mind about that pivotal historical event. 65 Belioc responded by asserting that the French and Spanish events were separated by a profound spiritual difference:
The Religious Crusade in Spain 3 0 9
The French Revolution was founded on patriotism and prop erty, the Spanish is founded on Jewish Communism which specially attacks those two fundamental ideas of our Western civilisation. What the two movements have in common is hos tility to the Catholic Church, but in the French case that hos tility came in from the side, it was incidental. It took root because religion had been lost in the directing mind of the French people. The civil constitution of the clergy was the consequence and started the whole quarrel; but the Communist attack on the Church is a main activity: indeed, the two great forces now fac ing each other in the Western world are Communism and Catholicism. That is why it was good strategy on the part of the Moscow Jews to attack Spain. I think they would have suc ceeded if it had not been for Franco forestalling them. It was a close thing. 66 Once Belloc had found what he believed to be the "key'' to the Spanish imbroglio, he appears to have felt no need to analyze the affair any further: like Procustes with his bed, everything would be made to fit the thesis. Belloc's vision was Manichean. In his mind Spain was on the verge of an Armageddon-like struggle between good and evil. In this sense his assessment of the situation was iden tical to the propaganda of the radical counter-revolutionaries in Spain. They, like Belloc, also saw their enemies as the anti-Christ, composed of three parts: Jews, Freemasons, and Marxists.67 From this point on, Belloc's objective was to get the message out, to under take a massive campaign of propaganda to show the world that Franco was wrestling the anti-Christ in a noble but insufficiently ap preciated struggle to save Western civilization. As he told a �een's Hall meeting of the Friends of Nationalist Spain in March 1939: . . . in spite of the contradictions and cross purposes of the moment, one major fact still stands out. The Spanish struggle has been a crusade: a struggle between forces organized for the destruction of religion and forces organized in the defense of religion . . . . It was to restore the Spanish nation and the religion with which that nation is identified that Franco rose and that he and his followers have fought. . . . "68
JIO CATHOLIC I N T ELLECTUALS A N D T H E CHALLENGE OF D E M O C RACY
There was a lacuna of critical analysis in Belloc's visions of Spain, as was the case with most others on both the Left and Right who chose sides in 1936. Objective, analytical evaluations were not necessary-a strong emotional response was sufficient. Nowhere is this more apparent than in Belloc's failure to study carefully the case of the Spanish anarchists. If he had looked more closely, Belloc might have recognized some striking parallels between the motives ofworkers and peasants in Catalonia and his own involvement with the virtually revolutionary upheavals in British labor circles prior to World War I. This broader perspective might have made him, and those who followed his lead, more sensitive to the complex social dynamics that drove the conflict in Spain. However, this is probably a moot point, since Belloc's circle had no interest in such matters as regards the civil war: the anticlerical fury at the begin ning of the conflict defined the issues in a purely religious, emotive perspective. Yet in terms of Belloc's perceptive critique ofindustrial capitalism there was a sharp rupture with respect to what he ana lyzed in Britain and what he chose to see in Spain. Belloc does not appear to have noted any affinities whatever between the working-class revolution directed by the Spanish anar chists and syndicalist activity in pre-war Britain. As we have seen in The Party System, The Servile State, and in numerous articles in the Daily Herald, the New Age, and other such avant-garde papers, Belloc, along with Cecil Chesterton, had condemned conventional English political processes as irrelevant for satisfying working-class interests. The two chastised trade union leaders for "selling out" to the oligarchy of capitalists and urged the workers to take things into their own hands and smash the bureaucracies that oppressed them. Belloc and both the Chesterton brothers (Gilbert and Cecil) urged the British laboring classes to reject wage slavery and demand con trol and ownership of the means of production. The Catalan anarcho-syndicalist trade union, the Confedera tion Nacional de Trabajo or C.N.T., was probably the most radical element in the melange of revolutionary groups in Spain. Their members were bitter foes of the Spanish communists. The C.N.T. was founded in 1910-n to accomplish the same objectives as the syn dicalist and industrial unionist groups (formed at the same time)
The Religious Crusade in Spain 3n
that Belloc and his friends had supported in the pre-World War I years. Like their British counterparts, the Spanish anarchists op posed "bourgeois" politics and urged their members to use "direct action'' tactics against their employers with the objective of bring ing control and ownership of the productive system into the hands of the workers. Rather than prolong collective bargaining, the Span ish anarchists, much like the British syndicalists who were appre ciative of and seemingly influenced by Belloc's views on the subject, fully distrusted management and preferred the swiftness of the strike to reach their goals. The C.N.T. was essentially libertarian. It had no permanent officials. The association's literature celebrated the independence of the worker and opposed all forms of bureaucratic and elitist structures because they stifled the individual's creative capacities. They were uncompromising in their resistance to the wage slavery of modern capitalism. Not unlike Distributists, the Span ish anarchists were communitarians who championed a return to life on a small scale. As opposed to their communist and socialist rivals, whose "na tionalization" programs hinged on control by the party standing "above" workingmen with a tight leash on the rank and file, the C.N .T. spoke of what it called "collectivized" policies, meaning con trol from "below," essentially from the factory floor. 69 The urban workers in the C.N .T. were syndicalists, meaning that they favored a "vertical" social restructuring along lines familiar to Britain's guild socialists: workers would be organized into self-governing guilds or syndicates interacting in democratic fashion with other related vocational units. These arrangements were supposed to restore the freedom and dignity workers lost in the soulless tyranny of the mod ern factory system. Peasants associated with the C.N .T. advocated a rural social order based on the pueblo or "small town'' whose inhabitants would form democratic, cooperative, self-sufficient mini-communities free from outside interference.70 The rural visions of G. K. Chesterton and Belloc had been colored by the idyllic Rural Rides of William Cob bett of a century ago; the Spanish anarchists were inspired by their ideas of the primitive communes that existed in the medieval, sup posedly halcyon days of sixteenth- and seventeenth-century Spain.
312 CATHOLIC I N T ELLECTUALS AND T H E CHALLENGE OF D E M O C RACY
The writer Gerald Brenan, who experienced the civil war first hand and subsequently came to appreciate the vitality of Spanish Catholicism, has called the anarchists uniquely Spanish. His de scription of their ideals, however, would seem to apply equally to Distributism, which G. K. Chesterton and Belloc thought uniquely English. The Spanish anarchists, Brenan wrote, managed to "canal ize" feelings that were deeply seated in the Spanish soul: One may describe this as a hatred of political shams, a craving for a richer and deeper social life, an acceptance of a low material standard of living and a belief that the ideal of human dignity and brotherhood can never be obtained by political means alone, but must be sought in a moral reformation (compulsory, it is needless to say) of society. That is what one might call the char acteristic Spanish attitude. Contrary to the Liberal doctrine which separated Church from State and society from govern ment, it aims at an integration of political and social life. But it is not totalitarian. Far from asserting the moral supremacy of the State, it holds the Christian view that every human being, what ever his capacity or intelligence, is an end in himself, and that the State exists solely to advance these ends. And it goes further. The long and bitter experience which Spaniards have had of the workings of bureaucracy has led them to stress the superiority of society to government, of custom to law, of the judgement of neighbours to legal forms ofjustice and to insist on the need for an inner faith or ideology, since this alone will enable men to act as they should, in mutual harmony, without the need for compulsion. 71 As was clearly the case with Distributists, Brenan viewed Spanish anarchists as similarly driven by a strongly idealistic, moral-religious vision reflecting a nostalgia for an earlier Gemeinschaft order where individuals had dignity and the security of place.72 The anarchists were primarily responsible for the violence un leashed against the Spanish Catholic Church. But this was a rage fueled by an intense anticlericalism and the Church's solidarity with the traditional institutions of tyranny; it was a collection of hatreds not unlike those that spawned terror against the Church during
The Religious Crusade in Spain 3 13
the French Revolution. Yet this terrifying fury, as Brenan correctly observes, was not strictly anti-religious. It was rather a violence fed by the fires of the social Gospels. At the core of New Testament teaching is the damnation of the rich and the blessedness of the poor. The Christian notion of the social good is tied to the func tioning of a corporate ethos in which the rich have a paternalistic responsibility to serve the poor. There was always a persistent dan ger, Brenan pointed out, that any weakening of the Church, any large-scale failure of the priesthood to fulfill its mission of social deaconry, could lead to more emphasis by its critics on the social principles of equality and brotherly love; for those failing to heed such injunctions, it could lead to the pain of the sword. 73 There were both obvious and significant differences between Spanish anarchism and the industrial unionist elements supported by Belloc and company. The anarchists opposed all forms of pri vate property as oppressive (yet this was also the case with some of the guild socialists with whom the G. K. Chesterton and Belloc allied themselves) , and, like the French revolutionists, they were violently anticlerical. All this was behind anarchist-directed, not communist, violence against the Church. Belloc's outrage at the anticlerical fury clearly outweighed any visceral sympathy he may have had for the Spanish revolutionaries. Yet it is clear that he did not bother to examine their social situation and programs very closely, which suggests that Belloc's understanding of the Spanish situation was limited, reductionist, and ultimately subordinated to his larger thesis that Europe was the faith, and the faith was Europe. In this perspective, Spain, the most Catholic of nations, represented the unbroken tradition of Catholic culture (that is to say, the faith in its purest form) . Since Europe's culture was determined by Greco Roman traditions preserved in the mother Church, Spain's struggle against communism was, in effect, a battle to preserve Western civi lization.74 In the final analysis, Belloc's purpose was not to analyze the Spanish tragedy with any scholarly objectivity. His mission was to wage a propaganda campaign to save civilization from the rabble. One of Belloc's more ardent disciples, Arnold Lunn, said it best: "it is infinitely more important to write propaganda for the Faith than to write anything else. For Catholicism is not only a culture it is culture."75
3 14 CAT H O L I C I NT E LLECTUALS A N D T H E CHALLENGE O F D E M O C RACY
Many Catholics who rushed to the defense of Franco inter preted the issues along lines that had been set down by their men tor, Belloc.76 The most articulate and persuasive of the English were Belloc's proteges Arnold Lunn, Christopher Hollis, Gregory Mac donald, Douglas Jerrold, and Douglas Woodruff. The Spanish Civil War for them was a religious "White Crusade" against communism, a struggle to save the West from the perdition of atheism.77 The complex web of social, economic, and political factors that con tributed to the wrenching conflict in Spain were given short schrift by these writers, for they were seen as secondary issues in a struggle that was inherently religious. 78 The extraordinary violence against the Church and its repre sentatives in territory under control of Republican loyalists when the revolution first broke out was the immediate catalyst in bring ing many Catholic intellectuals to play an active role on Franco's behalf and as the war dragged on this remained the defining issue for most Catholics. Arnold Lunn was typical of this mind-set when he wrote that "the persecution of the Church by the Spanish Reds would have been decisive for me even ifl had not numbered among my friends a single Spaniard."79 The Catholic publisher Frank Sheed later admitted that his friends knew very little about conditions in Spain, "but as between people who murdered priests and nuns and people who didn't, we preferred those who didn't. It was practically a reflex reaction."80 The response of Belloc and his associates to the Spanish situ ation, with some exceptions, essentially mirrored general English Catholic thinking on the Republican experiment in Spain. When the Republic of 1931 first took shape, most English Catholics were hopeful that the Spanish Church would reform itself and make an effort to work constructively with the new government. 81 As the Catholic Herald put it, the cause of freedom and religion were linked and only in a "free, instructed, religious and moral" democracy could the Church find a true ally. 82 Even after the wave of anticlerical vio lence in May 1931 the conservative Jesuit magazine The Month felt that the popular anger with Catholicism was due to the Church's close ties to a corrupt and exploitative state, and it criticized Spain's Catholic leaders for failing to serve the poor. 83
The Religious Crusade in Spain 3 15
The general view in England was that the Spanish Church ought to support social change along lines outlined in the papal labor encyclicals (the matter was all the more urgent as Quadra gesimo Anno had just been published) and that the current situation offered an ideal opportunity to make common cause with the Re public to initiate such reforms. There was considerable hope that the Catholic Action group under Gil Robles (which stressed the replacement of class warfare by the social Gospels and the estab lishment of a Christian corporative state) could come to terms with the new government. Increasingly, especially after the Asturias revolt, English Catholics saw Gil Robles as the only barrier to a Marxist takeover in Spain. However, as reports of mounting extremism and violence grew more ominous in the spring and summer of 1936, English and American Catholics became convinced that the central issue in Spain was less the failure of the Church to promote social reform than revolutionary Marxism, a sentiment given further cre dence in the following year with the publication of Pius Xi's encycli cal Divini Redemptoris condemning atheistic communism. Once the generals revolted, all Catholic aspirations for the creation of a new Christian order in Spain disappeared, and the defining issue now became the battle against Bolshevism. 84 The fury unleashed against the clergy after the pronunciamiento solidified the issue. For most Catholics the matter was now purely one of religious freedom. As the Jesuit journal The Month was quick to point out, if the Nationalists were defending the faith, all else was of no consequence. 85 Thus from the very outset of the conflict there was little interest in examining the social and political context of the Spanish Civil War; Hilaire Belloc and his fellow propagandists had a frightened, ready-made audience for their message. One of the most zealous proponents ofBelloc's "White Crusade" idea was Reginald Dingle, the translator of an unabashedly propa gandistic panegyric of General Franco (George Rotvand's Franco Means Business, with an introduction by Gregory Macdonald) and a regular contributor to most of the influential Catholic periodicals in England. Rotvand's main thesis was that Franco was a hero of epic proportions: he was a military genius, a charismatic intellec tual with almost perfect qualities in every sense. In fact, claimed
3 16 CATHOLIC I N T ELLECTUALS AND THE CHALLENGE O F D E M O C RACY
Rotvand, he is a man with "no weakness."86 Dingle was merciless with Catholic writers who failed to see Franco the way Rotvand described him. Such Catholics, he insisted, lacked the faith. 87 Dingle was singularly incapable of recognizing the resentment of many working-class Catholics against the Spanish Church's relationship with wealth and privilege. Throughout the conflict he insisted that attacks on the Church were unequivocally the product of a diabolical hatred of the supernatural. 88 The writings of Belloc's young disciple, Gregory Macdonald, revealed a common feature of nearly all right-wing Catholic views on the Spanish conflict, namely, a deep-seated animus for liberal ism. In fact, a central feature of the crusade idea was not an attack on the conditions that spawned communism (and this is what so annoyed liberals like H. A. Reinhold, Luigi Sturzo, and Virgil Michel) but an assault on movements and individuals with liberal political views. In this effort, many prominent British and Ameri can Catholics were willing to accept "anti-democratic disreputables" as allies. 89 Macdonald put Franco in the company of the great de fenders of Christendom (Roland, Alfred the Great, Godfrey deBuil lon, Don John of Austria, and others) because Franco was holding forth against the combined forces of the nineteenth-century liberal tradition, which Macdonald labeled the "Left Wing." In this category he lumped together such seemingly disparate groups as Manches ter liberals, democrats, internationalists, humanitarians, philan thropists, and communists. Like Belloc, Macdonald regarded all these categories as cloaks for a series of sinister conspiracies. Lib eralism, for instance, was considered a gospel of rights and freedoms for the wealthy to exploit the poor. Democrats were people who hoped to control the commonweal through secret committees; hu manitarianism was a ruse for the denial of a belief in God. And finally, the communists, representing the apogee of the left-wing conspiracy utilizing the false doctrines of Genevan international law (the League of Nations was presumably vitiated from its origins by Protestant and Jewish connections), were operating through the guise of the United Front to destroy Christian Europe. For all these reasons, Macdonald and his fellow right-wing Catholics saw the Spanish Civil War as a turning point in history.
The Religious Crusade in Spain 3 17
A most revealing assessment of the Christian crusade idea was put forward by the English Catholic convert and writer Stanley B. James in The Month of September 1937· Rather than recognizing the call to arms in Spain as an unfortunate human tragedy, James deemed the struggle largely positive, offering hope for a new type of "Catho lic Action." James saw a clear parallel between the civil war and the crusades of the eleventh century. Although the latter failed, the spiritual energies they unleashed transferred the militant crusad ing ideal to a higher plane and, as it reappeared in the religious revivals of the Middle Ages, not only saved Europe from falling to the prey of commercialism but sparked a Christian cultural renais sance. In J ames's view, Europe of the 1930s was in need of a similar revitalization. The spiritual and economic collapse that followed World War I produced a moral vacuum, a fertile breeding ground for "amoral liberalism" and the atheistic propaganda of Marxists. Given the low morale ofWestern Europe, the war in Spain offered Catholicism a golden opportunity. General Franco's vigorous offen sive against what Gregory Macdonald called the "Left Wing" would give new heart to Catholic Action, which had wallowed too long in a defensive siege mentality. In tones reminiscent of Georges Sorel's myth of the general strike and the mystical musings ofJose Antonio Primo de Rivera's fascist dreams, James welcomed Franco and the Spanish bloodletting as a means of breathing life into a Catholic renaissance: Has it to be confessed that the forms of Catholic Action pro posed to us, admirable as they are, have as yet failed to create widespread enthusiasm? If so, that is because there is no Peter the Hermit among us, nor anything like a Crusade to which he could summon us. Need this be so? For the creation of a popu lar movement, now as in the time of the Crusades, something spectacular and physical is required. 90 James's wishes were fulfilled in the eyes of the eminent Ameri can Jesuit publicist and scholar, Joseph Thorning, S.J. After having returned from Spain in the autumn of 1937 Thorning waxed rhap sodic in praise of Franco's soldiers: "War has few attractive features
3 18 CATHOLIC I N T ELLECTUALS A N D T H E CHALLENGE OF D E M O C RACY
but it must be acknowledged that the war-time tempo occasionally lifts a nation from lethargy and dolcefar niento into the zone of time tables and the systematic dispatch ofbusiness."91 There were a good number ofBelloc's disciples who accepted Stanley James's challenge to revitalize the faith through Nietzschean combat. Indeed, a spe cial feature of the Catholic Right's crusade for Franco was its love of a good fight. Once again, Arnold Lunn provides a model of the style. Lunn was stimulated when he could intimidate large crowds, in particular, said he, when they shouted with anger: "I like to make these enemies of everything which I love." Lunn claimed that he believed it would be infinitely easy to enjoy "burning a mob of Reds." He feared that American Catholics were insufficiently mili tant. One of Lunn's major objectives as Visiting Professor of Apolo getics at the University of Notre Dame was to raise the level of militancy in his students. "Unless they get stirred up," said Lunn, Americans will "get it in the neck."92 Lunn went so far as to urge his audiences to kill for their religion. Father Virgil Michel, with redo lent disgust, reported that when Lunn spoke at St. John's Univer sity he not only called Franco's campaign a holy war of the Catholic religion but told the students: "You must be ready to die for your faith; yes sometimes you must be ready to kill for your faith."93 Arnold Lunn's ally in militant religious polemics, Douglas Jer rold, saw something both ennobling and biologically imperative in combat. His words had an uncomfortably fascist ring to them: An idea for which a man is not prepared to die is not an idea sufficiently dynamic to stimulate the instinct to serve, and it is on the stimulation of this instinct, on its predominance over all else that, as a matter of mere biological necessity, the health of the race depends. For it is only in serving that the male can attain moral dignity, without which the race must deteriorate and ulti mately decay. 94 Arnold Lunn was a great admirer and close friend of the Span ish grandee and ardent monarchist, Captain Gonzalo de Aguilera, Count de Alba y Yeltes, Nationalist Spain's diplomatic agent in London. After Britain recognized Franco's government in 1939, Alba was appointed Ambassador to the Court of St. James, where
The Religious Crusade in Spain 3 1 9
he stayed until 1945.95 Lunn was fond of dropping the Count's name and that of other notables as a way of impressing people with his close connections with the Spanish aristocracy. Despite his pedigree (he was a descendant ofJames II, which endeared him to English Catholic notables), educational training (Beaumont and Madrid University), and government experience (he was appointed Spanish Minister of Education in 1930 and subse quently Foreign Minister in the Berenguer Government), the Count de Alba was a brute in nobleman's clothing. He seems to have been much more popular in Britain than in his native country, and Lon don, where he spent most of his time, afforded him the congenial company of other well-placed aristocrats. The Count owned almost 222,000 acres of property in Spain but seems to have been the quin tessential absentee landlord. 96 Aguilera served the Nationalist cause in many different capacities, but he turned out to be somewhat of an embarrassment as Franco's press liaison officer in the north of Spain. For example, on the day the civil war broke out, which he helped plan, the Count proudly informed an English visitor that he promptly lined up the laborers on his estate, selected six from the group, and shot them in front of the others-''pour encourager !es autres, you understand."97 The troubles in Spain, Aguilera an nounced to the American journalist John T. Whitaker, were due to the introduction of public sanitation. Before city drainage the canaille had been killed off by diseases: Had we no sewers in Madrid, Barcelona, and Bilbao, all these Red leaders would have died in their infancy instead of excit ing the rabble and causing good Spanish blood to flow. When the war is over, we should destroy the sewers . . . . Sewers are a luxury to be reserved for those who deserve them, the leaders of Spain, not the slave stock. Whitaker claimed Aguilera told him that We have got to kill and kill and kill, you understand . . . . It's our program . . . to exterminate one third of the male population of Spain. That will purge the country and we will be rid of the proletariat. 98
320 CATHOLIC I N T ELLECTUALS AND T H E CHALLENGE O F D E M O C RACY
Whitaker was disgusted by the Count's talk, yet he wrote that it was typical of what he heard expressed by hundreds of others on Franco's side.99 Arnold Lunn, on the other hand, found Aguilera "not only a good soldier but a scholar" whose general philosophy was positively enlightening.100 Lunn told the Count that he wished he himself had been born a Spaniard, for there were only two types of Christian he found appealing: "Saints like St. Theresa and St. Peter Claver, and real tough conquistadors such as my good friend Aguilera." Lunn took considerable pride in his own tough guy image, which he carefully cultivated as a militant Catholic :figuratively bashing heads for Franco. Lunn reassured his friend Aguilera that he was every bit as tough as the Count: "Hair shirts or beautiful guns looted at Bilbao. I've not much more use for anything in between."101 The Count responded in kind. When Lunn boasted of having a debate in which he "flattened out" an Oxford don and an Eton master who were wearing the fashionable color of pink, Aguilera wrote that he himself would have enjoyed immensely "to have been present and have helped to jab at these pinky products of protestantism."102 Perhaps the best example of the merging of civil war machismo and religious zealotry can be seen in the career of a South African Catholic poet, Roy Campbell. Campbell can rightly be called the "Hemingway of the Right." Like Campbell, Hemingway was also a convert to the faith but one who served the other side. Campbell's persona was that of a rough man of the bush, though in fact he came from a wealthy South African family. Yet Campbell seems more the genuine article than Hemingway, for he actually supported himself in Provern;e as bullfighter and :fisherman. His male chauvinism may also have exceeded Hemingway's: Campbell boasted of shaking up the illusions of his new wife that she was going to wear the pants in the family by hanging her out of a fourth-floor window. This, he wrote, earned her respect.103 Roy Campbell welcomed the struggle promised by civil war: I was disgusted at what I took to be the tame, cringing fatalism of the Nationalists who, after all, formed the majority. They had turned both cheeks so many times that it began to look cowardly
The Religious Crusade in Spain 321
rather than Christian . . . . Little did I know what a feast of hero ism was in store!1°4 The conflict did more than simply inspire Campbell to fl.ex his lit erary muscles: it also convinced him and his wife to forsake their amorphous Anglo-Catholicism for the real thing. In a secret nigh time ceremony in June 1936 they were received into the Roman faith by Isidro Goma y Tomas, cardinal-archbishop ofToledo and pri mate of Spain. With this, Campbell claimed, he could at least step into the front ranks of the Regular Army of Christ. Campbell hoped to serve in the ranks of the Carlist militia, the Requetes, but Marques de Pablo Merry del Val, chief of the Nation alist Press Service, persuaded the poet that Franco needed "pens not swords." Nevertheless, in his autobiography Campell writes of having killed Bolsheviks in self-defense as he fought his way out of Toledo, and in the poem "We / Who Are in the Legion" describes taking part in a cavalry charge.105 Campbell deliberately created an image of himself as a zealous soldier taking up arms for Franco. He was indeed zealous, points out his biographer, Peter Alexander, but as a writer not a soldier. In fact, Campbell's single battlefield experi ence consisted of a one-day motor tour of the front on l July 1937 as a correspondent of the London Tablet.106 The South African poet David Wright, who came to know Campbell very well after the war, wrote that Roy was almost the exact reverse of the truculent persona he projected in his writings. All this was part of Campbell's theater to the world: it was a "put on," part of the mask of vainglory brag gadocio behind which hid a modest man. 107 Campbell's writings on Spain, which one critic has called pre posterous distortions of fact, 108 had the hard edge of combat about them. The celebration of slaughtering one's enemies was so graphic in his epic philo-fascist poem of the civil war, Flowering Rifle, that Stephen Spender claimed to have become physically ill reading pas sages from it.109 Hilaire Belloc and his circle, on the other hand, found the book, in Belloc's words, "a really good thing," a work of art against which all of Campbell's other work would pale.110 As might be expected, Campbell was not one to sit back and accept Spender's criticism lightly. He struck back by calling Spender
J22 CATHOLIC I N TELLECTUALS AND T H E CHALLENGE OF D E M O C RACY
and his leftist friends "cowards." The following lines were aimed at Spender and his party: . . . these three hundred Red-Necks thrilled and caught, By Prophecy, on the live wires of thought, Brought here to learn why communists 'feel small' And we so perpendicular and tall (Like a Catholic over Comrades' Hall)111 Campbell did more than attack Spender in print. One evening he mounted the stage where Spender was giving a lecture and punched him.112 Campbell's style and sentiments were mirrored in a coterie of reactionary English writers associated with the January Club. Founded on New Year's Day 1934, this was an informal association of like minded thinkers, many of whom expressed great admiration for the works of Hilaire Belloc. The group gathered at luncheons and din ners to discuss the virtues of fascism.113 Although they did not agree on all matters, the members were convinced that the democratic political system in Britain had to be scrapped. A companion and protege of Hilaire Belloc, Sir John Squire, editor of the London Mer cury, became the first chairman of the January Club. Many who joined this group wrote for Jerrold's English Review and Lady Hous ton's Saturday Review, a journal that championed Mussolini and all forms of fascist dictatorship. Among the January Club's more prominent members were Francis Yeats-Brown, Sir Charles Petrie, Muriel Currey, and Major-General ]. F. C. Fuller, all of whom were unabashedly philo-fascist.114 The January Club articulated various positions on Fascist Italy that were essentially the same as Belloc's, and, not surprisingly, its members became some of the most vocal and influential sources of pro-Franco propaganda in Britain. Sir Charles Petrie, an Irish baronet and, in the words of Doug las Jerrold, a "genius" on foreign affairs whom he alone had the good fortune to have discovered, was one of England's more ardent monar chists. Petrie's ideas on the subject appear to owe much to Belloc. Indeed, even his language and literary imagery resembled Belloc's.115 Petrie praised Belloc's exceptionally insightful attacks on England's
The Religious Crusade in Spain 3 23
parliamentary system and deeply respected what he called his anti democratic authoritarianism.116 Like Belloc, Petrie was a close reader ofActionfranraise and regarded the Catholic writers Paul Deroulede, Maurice Barres, and Charles Maurras, among other French reac tionaries, as the true intellectual sources of the fascist ideology he so admired.117 Although he praised fascist dictatorship, Petrie realized that this political form was highly personal and lacked adequate mechanisms for transferring authority. In the end he believed it must give way to a feudal-style monarchy, which to Petrie's mind was inherently more stable than aristocracy or democracy. 118 Along with James Strachey Barnes, the fascist triumphalist and El Duce sycophant whose views on Italian politics he completely accepted, Charles Petrie was one of Britain's foremost champions of Mussolini. The Italian dictator was the best representative of "a revival of monarchy"; his invasion of Abyssinia gave Italians pride and confidence once again as the true heirs of imperial Rome. For this deed, claimed Petrie, Mussolini "deserves to rank among the greatest leaders in history."119 To Petrie, Mussolini was a benevolent and patriotic despot. As for his purging of the liberal democratic priest Don Luigi Sturzo, it was a necessary consequence of the poli tics of the Popular Party, which the Fascist government could ill afford to tolerate. Indeed, wrote Petrie, the Vatican's troubles with the Fascists were directly caused by the intrigues of Sturzo's party.120 Sir Charles Petrie's position on the Spanish Civil War mirrored his interpretation of ltalian Fascism. The followers of Franco were the progenitors of the true Spanish monarchical tradition. Like the reactionary Carlists, they had no time for the "imported" social and political customs of the French Revolution but rather were trying to restore to Spain the praxis of throne and altar found in Catholic corporativism. Many of the writers associated with the English Review circle and the January Club were members of the "Friends of Nationalist Spain," the most important pro-Franco organization in Britain. This group was founded by the Count of Alba and Luis Bidwell Bolin, who before the war was a journalist for Spain's chief Catho lic and pro-monarchist paper, the Madrid daily ABC. Bolin served Franco in many capacities, eventually acting as press attache at the
3 24 CATHOLIC I N T ELLECTUALS A N D T H E CHALLENGE O F D E M O C RACY
Spanish embassy in London. The idea behind the Friends of Nation alist Spain, wrote Bolin, was to make "the truth better known'' about what was happening in that country. 121 Bolin himself, however, was notorious for ensuring that only his version of the truth about Spain was made known. As Nationalist Chief of Press in the south of Spain, Bolin had been instructed by his boss, General Jose Millan Astray y Terreros, to intimidate foreign journalists into following the Nationalist line.122 Bolin pursued his orders with zeal, especially in the case involving Arthur Koestler, whom he had imprisoned. It appears that Bolin was prepared to hang Koestler on the spot after arresting him in Malaga (Bolin disapproved of Koestler's journal ism) but was persuaded from doing so by the intervention of Sir Peter Chalmers Mitchell, a well-connected English nobleman.123 There were five "original" founding members of the Friends of Nationalist Spain: Bolin, the Count of Alba, Charles Petrie, Vic tor Raikes, MP, and Douglas Jerrold. Jerrold and Bolin claimed that they "lit the fuse" for the civil war by conspiring to smuggle Franco out of the Canary Islands on a secret flight in order to take charge of the military uprising in Morroco.124 The Friends quickly attracted supporters, and Bolin could boast that the group had a consider able amount of political clout in appropriate circles. Such pressures served to influence banks and the government in favor of Nation alist interests. 125 Arnold Lunn related that Neville Chamberlain had told Sir Martin Melvin, owner of the Catholic weekly The Uni verse, that if it had not been for the forceful action of Catholics he would have been obliged to take action extremely embarrassing to Franco's cause. 126 An important member of the "Friends" who served as an active propagandist carefully working behind the scenes was the Marquis del Moral, Frederick Ramon Bertodano y Wilson. Moral was born in Australia, served in the British army in the Boer War and World War I, and later acquired a Spanish title and citizenship. Along with Jerrold and Bolin he published an anti-Republican book called The Spanish Republic in 1933 .127 The purpose of the book was to expose the Republic's corruption, human rights abuses, and general drift toward anarchy. Christopher Hollis gave The Spanish Republic a very favorable review in the Catholic Herald (29 July 1933), and it was well received among English Catholic readers.128 Douglas Jerrold claimed
The Religious Crusade in Spain 3 25
that Moral was the spark plug behind the Friends, a "remarkable and buoyant personality" whose "overflowing hospitality kept our small group in being and in remarkable amity over a number of years."129 Moral had personal access both to Franco and to a number of conservative MPs, over whom he had considerable influence. 130 In August 1936 Moral submitted to the British Foreign Office pho tocopies of "certain secret reports and orders of the Socialist Communist Headquarters in Spain," supposedly obtained for him with considerable difficulty, calling for an uprising between early May and late June 1936. This was part of the evidence used by the Catholic Right to prove that the pronunciamiento was prompted by the necessity of averting a communist takeover in Spain. These documents, which the British Foreign Office found to be forger ies, were later published in Arthur Loveday's books World War in Spain (London, 1939) and Spain, z923-z948; Civil War and World War (London, 1949) . Loveday was pro-Insurgent and a former president of the British Chamber of Commerce in Barcelona, and his books were vehicles of propaganda for Franco's cause. Close analysis of the documents and the circumstances in which Loveday procured them suggest that they were concocted before the civil war by some pro fascist group to convince the Spanish people that the Reds were planning a revolution. Variations of this so-called "secret evidence" were published in 1937 by the Nazi-controlled anti-Komintern in Berlin and reprinted in a number of other publications in France, the United States, and elsewhere. 131 These documents served as "indisputable evidence" for the British and American supporters of Franco's cause that the Movimiento Nacional was the only thing that prevented a communist takeover in Spain. Typical of this attitude was Owen B. McGuire, a regular commentator on the Spanish Civil War for The Sign, the national Catholic magazine of the American Passionist Fathers. Reference was seldom made, wrote McGuire, to plans for a Red revolution in the spring of 1936, which only failed because of the army uprising.132 Another key activist for the Friends was the Tory MP, Brigadier General Sir Henry Page Croft. Like his friend Hilaire Belloc, Croft proclaimed that Franco was a gallant and heroic Christian figure and worked indefatigably for his cause both inside and out side Parliament.133
3 26 CATHOLIC I NTELLECTUALS AND T H E CHALLENGE OF D E M O C RACY
Hilaire Belloc also did his part for the Friends of Nationalist Spain. He wrote the chairman of the Friends Committee, Lord R. F. Phillimore, a seminal figure in the Franco propaganda cam paign and unofficial envoy to Nationalist Spain for Prime Minister Chamberlain, that he supported their cause "from the bottom of my heart." Phillimore recruited Belloc as a keynote speaker for a major public meeting of the Friends to discuss the importance of Spain for Christian civilization. The gathering was held at Qyeen's Hall on 29 March 1939; its main purpose was to "scant" the idea of ltalian and German domination in Spain. 134 Belloc also worked actively in a confidential, behind-the-scenes fashion for the supporters of Nationalist Spain. He served as a recruiter of wealthy and influential conservatives willing to tour Nationalist territory and thus provide support for Franco's crusade. Among a host of potential recruits on Belloc's "strictly private and confidential" list were Duff and Lady Diana Cooper, Mrs . Ray mond Asquith, Lady Helen Asquith, J. M. Morton, and Desmond McCarthy. 135 Douglas Woodruff's London Tablet, which was the most promi nent organ of Catholic opinion in Britain,136 Jerrold's English Review, the Chesterton-Belloc alliance's G.K s Weekly and the Weekly Review, and the Jesuit paper The Month were all English journals of some influence among Catholic intellectuals that took up the pro paganda campaign for Franco. Another was the Colosseum. This feisty, impolite quarterly was founded and edited by the young Bernard Wall (he was twenty-five years old when the first issue appeared) . Inspired by Chesterton's and Belloc's papers, though with a decidedly more highbrow touch, the Colosseum provided a forum for Catholic-minded thinkers who sought to recover spiritual bal ance and Christian moral integration in a world consumed by the blind power of science and machines. Echoing Chesterton, the energetic Wall pointed out in one of the journal's early issues that "Modern life is on the average no more than a meaningless circle, unsanctified by any ideal, ordered towards no end, a frightful hash and chaos of old survivals and new fads."137 The youthful Bernard Wall had drunk deeply from Bellocian wells while a student at the Jesuit school, Stonyhurst. "Where tri-
The Religious Crusade in Spain 3 27
umphalism touched the nerve of my schooldays closest," he wrote, "was in the influence of Hilaire Belloc."138 Having been taught his tory in his last two years at Stonyhurst by Christopher Hollis, Wall entered Oxford with a physical joie de vivre fueled exclusively by Belloc's polemical works. His deep convictions about the truths of Belloc's book The Servile State led Wall to seek out the fledgling Distributist League at Oxford. He soon took charge of the move ment, and, thanks to his prodigious energies, the League grew enor mously in numbers. The appearance of the Colosseum in March 1934 was Wall's debut as a publicist. The operation was comparatively successful. It quickly built up a subscription list in England and the United States with a circulation that exceeded that of T. S. Eliot's Criterion. Colosseum published a number of distinguished continental writers, including Jacques Maritain, the Russian Christian philosopher Nicholas Berdyaev, Gonzague de Reynold, an eminent nobleman and pro fessor at the University ofFribourg, and the Belgian writer Marc de Munnynk. British writers who appeared regularly in the journal were ]. M. Turnell, Eric Gill, Christopher Dawson, and E. J. Oliver, Wall's Oxford friend who frequently helped him edit the paper. The young and impressionable Bernard Wall, following the lead of his intellectual mentors Arnold Lunn and Christopher Hollis, argued in his writings that the Renaissance was a chief source of the twentieth-century malaise.139 In the same vein as several reactionary intellectuals who had been influenced by the brilliant T. E. Hulme and Ramiro de Maeztu140 (notably, Wyndham Lewis, Ezra Pound, and William Butler Yeats), he contrasted the roving, restless roman tic of the day unfavorably with the "classical type" of Christian eras.141 Not surprisingly, the youthful Wall continued to walk the paths sug gested by de Maeztu and, much to the chagrin of his more liberal minded Catholic friends and advisors (including Eric Gill, Father Victor White, Don Luigi Sturzo, and Jacques Maritain) , became infatuated with fascism as a movement in tune with the moral inte gration of classical times. As Wall's assistant E. J. Oliver observed, the reactionary impulse all over Europe against the French revolu tionary tradition represented a return to morality. The object of the Royalists in France and the critics of democratic, Republican
3 28 CATHOLIC I N T ELLECTUALS AND T H E CHALLENGE OF D E M O C RACY
government was moral as political: " . . . it is the characteristic of these modern movements that they reunite politics with morality."142 The Colosseum threw its undivided and engergetic support to the Nationalist crusade because, taking up a line of argument so elo quently expressed by the eminence gris Hilaire Belloc, Franco was saving Spanish Christian culture from Bolshevism. But Wall went further than Belloc and most other conservative Catholics who sup ported the rebels: he was willing to accept the fascist label for Franco. To the editor of Colosseum, the rightist totalitarian alterna tive to Marxism had many qualities, both positive and negative. Fas cism, like democracy, might occasionally bring accidental evils and dangers. But it was capable of being a good political form the Church could accept and with which it could collaborate.143 Most signifi cantly, wrote Wall, fascism was the best weapon against Bolshevism: Fascism has saved Italy from the fate of Spain, and it may also save Spain from the fate of Russia. Italy has a youthful health iness which is badly needed in the world, and the fact that Fas cism has made Italy a great power is a good thing primarily because the whole mode oflife, the way of civilisation that Italy represents so superbly, has been resurrected at a time when the basic culture of Europe may have disappeared entirely.144 Bernard Wall's eventual embrace of fascism was rooted in his strong distaste for liberal democracy. Like many other conservative Catholics, he regarded communism as its natural outgrowth. His main criticism of liberalism was its antipathy for tradition. Wall admitted that conservatives and the elites of the old orders had pro vided good cause for such hostility, for they had lost touch with the masses and their ideas and programs had favored the rich. Since the defeat of conservatism in World War I, however, liberal politicians through their control of the League of Nations had mounted a root and-branch attack on all vestiges of tradition in European culture as retrograde and evil. In their laudable quest for social justice, the forces of the left were aiming to create a new world order in which religion, patriotism, and family values would become outmoded historical curiosities. Liberalism, "the philosophy of Geneva," was
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grounded in a deracinated view of humanity: it denied the legiti macy of national historical traditions as integrative forces in the cul tures of Europe. What liberals failed to appreciate, claimed Wall, was that tradition was as essential to civilized life as social justice, that the one could not be achieved without the other. In a phrase derivative ofBelloc, Wall noted that the movements of the left were strongest amongst "those classes which do not share the heritage of European culture."145 Bernard Wall came to believe that the fascist movements in Italy and Germany were positive reactions to the excesses of deracinated, cosmopolitan liberalism. Fascism represented a "revival of tradi tionalism," not entirely like the old conservatism it replaced, but rather evincing a willingness to embrace scientific development con structively while at the same time preserving the basic cultural life of people by subordinating technical and commercial development to traditional beliefs. Fascism in Wall's view was a herald of the "new Middle Ages": The strictness of its discipline is suggestive of feudalism, and this discipline may be a necessary means for giving mankind today a corporative social conscience . . . . The very exaggerations of the claims of the Fascist State over the individual and its use
of military discipline for knitting the atoms of society into a cor porative whole suggest a comparison with the achievement of feudalism in building up our civilisation.146 In its October 1938 issue Colosseum published for its readers the complete text ofJose Antonio Primo de Rivera's official doctrine of the Phalanx (or Falange Espanola, the party of Spanish fascism) . It was a full-fledged attack on democracy and liberalism that called for the construction ofwhat de Rivera named the "totalitarian State." Colosseum announced that de Rivera's fascism represented the true spirit of the Nationalist revolution in Spain.147 Wall's quarterly also distinguished itself from other British and American Catholic publications on the issue of Nazi Germany. Its editor occasionally had good things to say about Hitler. In January 1939, for example, Wall wrote a long article discussing the merits
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of Nazi racist policies, noting how they compared favorably with Catholicism as a force for creating national solidarity. Racism, argued Wall, "gives the people unity and hope."148 Colosseum sup ported a rapprochement between Germany and Britain. Wall as serted that it was important for the British to appreciate the fact that Germany needed Lebensraum. Like Great Britain and the United States, Germany, with the most "technologically developed" and "educated" people on earth, had the right to expand.149 In some ways Bernard Wall's views were the apotheosis of the continental integralist ideas that infused the English-speaking world through the pens of such persuasive writers as Hilaire Belloc and his Latinophile coterie. Given the authoritarian and anti Semitic proclivities of integralist thinking, it was only natural that those who were seduced by its creed would feel sympathy for the reactionary posturings of fascists and fellow-travelers who defended Franco's rebellion as a crusade for Christian culture.
C HAPT E R 13
Against the Tide: The Catholic Critics of Franco We are certain . . . that those who must refote at a later time the perverse historians diligently calumniating Catholicism far its contacts with the powers ofevil, will not be angry tofind, when they search the archives, some Catholics who raised their voices against the destruction ofGuernica. -Jacques Maritain1
T
he Catholic Right's reductionist depiction of the Spanish Civil War as an Armageddon between atheistic commu nism and Christianity was resisted by less ideologically driven Catholic intellectuals. A major voice of reason in opposition to the inquisitional attacks of the Right, one whose critique had a seminal impact on liberal British and American Catholics, was the French philosopher Jacques Maritain. Maritain and several Catholics of the cercle Thomiste (which included Frarn;ois Mauriac, Gabriel Marcel, Helene Iswolsky, and Emmanuel Mounier, among others) made their first public state ment on the proper role of the Christian in politics in the wake of the so-called Stavisky riots of February 1934, an ugly event that raised the specter of a fascist takeover in France. Their response took the form of a manifesto, Pour le Bien Commun, drawn up by Mari tain and signed by some fifty-one prominent Catholic writers, artists, and scientists. This was a key document in the emergence of Mari tain's political philosophy. It publicly announced the basic principles upon which he believed the conscientious Catholic should face the secular challenges of the twentieth century. 331
33 2 CATHOLIC INTELLECTUALS A N D T H E CHALLENGE OF D E M O C RACY
The manifesto had two main purposes. First, it emphasized the obligation of Catholic philosophers to move from the spiritual realm of theological speculation and ivory-tower academics into the tur moil of the political marketplace. The increasing public struggles between fascist and Marxist extremists called for peacemakers, voices of Christian sanity in a society whose discourse had sunk to the level of political vitriol. The second purpose of the manifesto was to caution the Catho lic intellectual against becoming part of the marketplace in the sense of actually identifying with a single political party. Becoming a par tisan of a particular political movement could only compromise the independence of the true Christian. The signatories emphasized that the Christian must be "in the world" but "not of the world."2 Maritain and his colleagues fundamentally opposed the idea of a Catholic political party, nor did they feel it legitimate for any other group in the marketplace to assume the posture of a Catholic party. 3 This position stemmed from the signatories' acceptance of the papal condemnation of Charles Maurras' Action Franraise, a movement which sought to use Catholicism as an instrument for reactionary po litical objectives. Maritain's group sought the construction of a Chris tian society but not through the agencies of a theocracy. A Christian social order along the lines put forth in the papal encyclicals had to be forged through the ideals of Catholic justice and charity, by Christian principles infusing the consciousness of the secular city. In addressing the specific dangers arising out of the Stavisky riots, Pour le Bien Commun pointed out two evils that would seduce European and American intellectuals for the rest of the decade. As Maritain's friend Helene Iswolsky noted, the February upheavals had divided France into two camps: . . . one of them, being specially conscious of present-day politi cal corruption, aspires confusedly to a revolution and an 'order,' which might in the long run assume a dictatorial form. The other . . . is especially aware of present-day social injustice; it aspires more or less to a 'revolution' and an order, but by means of a col lectivist regime oppressive to the human person.4
Against the Tide: The Catholic Critics of Franco 333
The danger was that Christians would see the obligation to chose between fascism and communism as solutions to the turmoil of the marketplace. For Maritain this was a false choice, since both "solu tions" would destroy individual freedom. Rather than remain silently passive, the Catholic should exercise his or her Christian responsi bility and oppose any doctrine which, in order to stanch fascism or communism, demanded the sacrifice of human liberty or dignity. Pour le Bien Commun drew attention to one other principle upon which the Christian should guide political conduct, and that was the obligation to heed Pope Leo XIII's warnings against the capi talists' exploitation of the working classes. Quadragesimo Anno, an updating of Leo XIII's Rerum Novarum, had asserted that Catho lic failure to take up the cause of labor had directly contributed to the drift of the working classes away from the Church and into the arms of Marxism. Most significantly, Pour le Bien Commun urged Catholics to measure political programs on the basis of their pro motion of individual freedom and moral responsibility. Only what Maritain called a "pluralist" political order, one "assembling in its organic unity a diversity of groups and of social structures incar nating positive liberties, deserved Catholic support."5 In subsequent manifestoes, lectures, books, and articles, many ofwhich responded to specific political issues (the Abyssinian invasion, the suppression of the working classes in Austria, racism, and so forth) , Maritain reemphasized and further refined the fundamental principles set down in Pour le Bien Commun. Maritain and the cercle Thomiste were also active during the 1930s writing for Sept and Esprit, two highly respected Catholic periodicals which advocated social reform along lines similar to those of the English Distributists who followed Chesterton's way of thinking. Maritain had helped establish the two journals. Sept was launched with Dominican affiliation on the promptings of the Vati can in order to articulate the Church's new emphasis on social reform and pluralistic forms of political organization in the aftermath of the Action Franfaise's condemnation. The j ournal was guided by the shibboleth "above party politics." Its intent was not to avoid political action but to preserve an independent voice. Sept hoped to find a common meeting ground for reasoned debate above the squabble of parties: " . . . we remain above the melie." "Neither of
334 CATHOLIC I N T E LLECTUALS AND T H E CHALLENGE O F D E M O C RACY
the Right nor of the Left, independent of all politics, the better to serve the city. "6 The moving force behind Esprit was Maritain's friend Em manuel Mounier. A deeply religious man, Mounier championed the necessity of a personal spiritual revolution as the foundation of a new Christian social order. Mounier's philosophy of "personalism," directly inspired by Maritain's pluralistic teachings and the writings of Charles Peguy, was an appeal for the reawakening of the human personality through direct participation in community affairs. 7 Like G. K. Chesterton, Mounier had been influenced by anarchist think ing and revolutionary syndicalism. His journal, Esprit, condemned the dehumanization wrought by industrial society and the capitalist ethic, yet it also recognized the evils of their socialist antidote, which sacrificed individual personalities to the bureaucratic necessities of collectivism. Much like the core ideas ofDistributism and the social principles that inspired the liturgical movement, Mounier's call for a spiritual renaissance aimed to integrate the individual fully into the community. The personalist revolution sought to liberate man from his social chains, but this transformation could not be accom plished through violence. It must be realized through spiritual means, for, as Peguy had insisted, "revolution must be moral, or it is not a revolution."8 Politically, Mounier and his colleagues supported a cor poratist state, one which offered a maximum of individual partici pation through professional and labor unit representation. Maritain, Mounier, and their associates assessed the Spanish conflict in the context of the cultural imperatives that informed Pour le Bien Commun, Esprit, and Sept. After carefully examining the issues, they concluded that the Civil War was the result of complex social and economic problems which had undermined a political system unable to adjust to the demands of modernization. The violent out burst of anticlericalism that marked the onslaught of the Civil War was the logical outcome of a tragedy already identified by Popes Leo XIII and Pius XI, namely, the failure of the Church to satisfy the needs of the laboring classes. Given the social and economic roots of the Spanish Civil War, Maritain and his friends could not in good conscience support the Insurgents simply because they claimed the banner of Catholicism.
Against the Tide: The Catholic Critics of Franco 335
In fact, religion itself had never been a central motivating factor in the military revolt that triggered the Civil War in the first place. The officer coup was a rightist reaction against what the Insurgents considered revolutionary policies of the Republican government. Early pronouncements by the Insurgents made no reference to reli gion, in part because the conspirators desired broad middle-class support and did not want to antagonize moderate anticlerical opin ion. The leading figures behind the pronunciamiento were not reli gious themselves. Only four of the ten members of the rebel Junta de Defensa Nacional had shown sympathy for political Catholicism, and senior general Miguel Cabanellas was not only a liberal but a Freemason.9 The marriage of reaction and religion came later, after some of the Insurgents recognized the political advantage of using Catholicism to consolidate Nationalist support among groups that were already predisposed to the military's counterrevolutionary goals. As the fury against religion intensified, Church leaders threw their support to Franco. Although he had shown no particular religious faith as an officer in Morocco, General Francisco Franco soon discovered the advan tage of playing up Spain's long cultural and political association with the Catholic Church. He was the moving force behind the "Col lective Letter" of the Spanish bishops supporting the Nationalists' cause. Franco's strategy was to link the Catholic faith with the cre ation of a Nationalist-authoritarian state which he openly called "totalitarian'' in the tradition of the monarchism and culture of the ancient Spanish kings. In April 1937 Franco made the fascist Falange the official state party-renamed the National Movement-and es sentially adopted its programs as the core of his new regime. By 1938 all Catholic secular associations (excepting its agrarian organization) were absorbed into state-controlled syndicates. This linkage of tradition with totalitarianism did not seem to disturb Cardinal Isidro Goma yTomas, the primate of Spain, and the other leading Spanish hierarchs, nor did they at any time voice pub lic criticism of the brutality of Franco's policies, which were respon sible for the political executions of tens of thousands of Spaniards. The American historian Stanley G. Payne, who is certainly not an unsympathetic observer of the Insurgent cause, has argued that
33 6 CATHOLIC I N T ELLECTUALS A N D T H E CHALLENGE OF D E M O C RACY
Franco's National Movement inaugurated the most reactionary cul tural policy of any Western state in the twentieth century, an enter prise, in his words, "virtually without parallel."10 Yet Cardinal Goma remained convinced that the Nationalist crusade would lead to a spiritual awakening in Spain. No compromise was possible, he in sisted. The Left must be totally defeated. At the close of the Civil War, Cardinal Gama's pastoral "Catolicisimo y Patria" read, "Let us give thanks to God that he [Franco J has willed to make of Spain a Christian people from the heights of [state J power."11 Jacques Maritain recognized that General Franco's authoritar ian political program contradicted the standards that guided Pour le Bien Commun. Maritain and his friends felt compelled to alert the international Catholic community to the dangers ofidentifying with a reactionary regime that was cynically using religion for political purposes.12 In this endeavor the Maritain circle discussed Franco's regime in the context of Pope Pius XI's encyclical Mit brennender Sorge (March 1937), which the Nationalists refused to publish. The encyclical criticized Nazi doctrine as inherently totalitarian and god less. The Vatican's warning to the Germans was grounded on prin ciples akin to those that undergirded its earlier condemnation of Charles Maurras' movement, which had employed Catholicism for tendentious political purposes.13 On the other hand, it seemed anomalous, to say the least, that the Nationalist government saw fit to translate and give wide circulation to the anti-Christian writings of Alfred Rosenberg and Julius Streicher. An exceedingly awkward situation occurred for the Catholic Right when the deeply religious Basque country threw its support to the Republican cause. This required a quick-witted Nationalist response, demanding the very best in Jesuitical casuistry. The British Catholic press rose to the challenge by suggesting that the Basques were under the sway of communists. Arnold Lunn, Douglas Jerrold, and others argued that only a minority of those in the Basque land :fighting Franco were Catholic, and Lunn claimed that even among these a mere handful were what could be called "genuine Catho lic." Once again, an a priori assumption was that anyone who op posed Franco was weak in the faith. The driving force behind the "schismatic" Basques was provided by the extreme Leftists, said
Against the Tide: The Catholic Critics of Franco 337
Lunn, and the few devout Catholics in their ranks had subordinated their religious principles to the narrow interests of nationalism.14 Lunn's assessments could not have been further off the mark. The Basques found themselves on the same side as the communists, but this was out of necessity. They were fighting for survival, and support of the military coup would have led to wholesale slaughter by radical leftists in Basque industrial centers. 15 Contrary to the claims of Nationalist propaganda, Marxism had no influence on Basque nationalism. The major influence on the radical economic thinking of the Basque Nationalist Party (PNV), which essentially determined the direction of Basque politics, was papal social phi losophy. This was by no means a working-class party. Its political base was non-revolutionary, pro-Catholic, and essentially bourgeois, consisting mainly of small landowners, owners of small to mid-size businesses, and members of the professional classes. Those in the PNV were recognized by the Basque hierarchy as representing the "best" of Basque Catholicism in spirit and in works.16 ln no way was their commitment to nationalism, that is, to Basque autonomy against the dominance of Castile, considered incompatible with the faith. Even the most ardent followers of Franco admitted that the Basques "were the most Christian people in Spain."17 Unlike the hierarchy elsewhere in Spain, the leaders of the Basque Church developed close ties to the community, putting into flesh Leo XIII's encyclical Rerum Novarum, which called for the implementation of social and economic democracy. The Basque clergy had spearheaded educational, religious, and agrarian reforms and gave its full support to the provinces' aspirations for political and cultural autonomy against Castilian hegemonic pressures. In deed, the Basque Church was so successful in social welfare work and in its encouragement of Christian trade unionism that social ism, anarchism, and communism found no appreciable audience in its industrial centers. Heeding the corporative suggestions of Rerum Novarum, the Basques had created Christian syndicates of indus trial workers, day laborers, fishermen, and farmers, and set up pro fessional associations for doctors, lawyers, and journalists, among others. Alongside these stood a large number of producer and con sumer cooperatives as well as syndical savings institutions. 18
33 8 CAT H O L I C I N T ELLECTUALS A N D T H E CHALLENGE OF D E M O C RACY
Not only were the Basque provinces of Guipuzca and Vizcaya considered the most Catholic areas of Spain; they were also the most European in orientation and culture. Early commercial and indus trial growth had led to strong links with Western Europe. Nearly half the peasants owned their own homes and farmlands, their popu lation was the most highly literate in Spain, the economy was more fully developed and balanced than in other provinces, their people had a proud tradition of self-government, and the Church, as op posed to that institution in Castile and Catalonia, had been trans formed by the winds of modernity. The Basque clergy lived close to the people, and priests played a central role in social and labor reform. Anticlerical.ism, a social virus that plagued the rest of Spain for nearly a hundred years, was virtually nonexistent. Moreover, un usually large numbers of the Basque population joined holy orders.19 For all these reasons, the Basque country experienced no social revo lution in 1936. It follows that Basque Catholics in general were far less isolated theologically than their co-religionists in the rest of Spain. It was only in the Basque country, for example, that translations of the papal encyclicals were regularly published for all to read. The very limited number of encyclicals translated in regions that supported the Nationalists were frequently altered to fit the ideological needs of the propertied classes.20 As implied earlier, Mit brennender Sorge, the encyclical that condemned Nazi practices, was actually suppressed by Franco and Cardinal Goma.21 At this time the German Condor Legion was playing a crucial role in the Nationalists' struggle with Basque autonomism, and Franco had no desire to give offense to Hitler by publicizing the text. Prior to the pronunciamiento the Basques had been both courted and buffeted by the Spanish Left and Right. Their progressive social philosophy was welcomed by the Left, but Leftists were not at all pleased by the Basque's assiduous opposition to the laical orienta tion of the Republican constitution. The Right had lobbied for the Basque vote prior to 1933 by promising to support their Statute of Statehood in the Cortes. This statute would have given the Basque provinces certain local powers as an autonomous region within the Spanish state. But once the threat of a communist takeover receded, the Rightists lost interest in granting the Basques devolutionary
Against the Tide: The Catholic Critics of Franco 339
rights. They were especially angry with the Basque bishop of Vitoria for voting in favor of the statute and for his support of Christian syn dicalism. After assuming power in 1933, the Right pursued an anti autonomistic course, at times violently persecuting the Basques. In the February 1936 elections the Basque Nationalist Party denounced the anti-Christian programs of the Leftists as well as the statist poli cies of the Right, supporting instead what it called the "eternal pro gram": Christian civilization, social justice, and Basque liberties. The Rightists invited the Basques to join the rebellion against the Azafia government. Senior Jose Antonio Aguirre, the Jesuit educated Catholic activist leader of the PNV and later president of the Basque country under a statute of autonomy given by the Re public during the civil war, spurned the offer, replying that "sedition and rebellion are not Christian weapons."22 The Basques supported the Republicans as soon as the military revolt occurred and never swayed in their loyalty throughout the course of the civil war. Basque Catholics justified their alliance with the Republic on several grounds. A Collective Letter of the Spanish Episcopate pub lished on 20 December 1931 had urged Catholics to obey the legal government of Spain; another issued in 1933 asked Catholics to work against unjust laws but within the confines of the constitution and without recourse to violence. These instructions were still in force by the pronunciamiento of 18 July 1936.23 Equally compelling was the necessity of assuring Basque cultural survival in the face of coercive, even terrorist policies of the followers of Franco. The Nationalist government intended to suppress the Basque language and press and close down their schools. There were even plans to exile the Basque clergy to other provinces in Spain. We fight, said an official decla ration of the Basque Nationalist Youth, for "God and the ancient Laws," so as to assure a peaceful society "based on justice, fraternity, and the dignity of the human person, help for the workers, venera tion of the family, and respect for authority."24 Finally, the declara tion expressed a profound appreciation of the democratic conception oflife, and this also was a reason why Basques felt compelled to sup port the Spanish Republic. In the final analysis, the Basques remained loyal to the Repub lic because their survival depended on it. The Republic was the legally established government, one which had expressed belief in
340 CATHOLIC I NTELLECTUALS A N D T H E CHALLENGE O F D E M O C RACY
the democratic process and offered them assurances of political and cultural autonomy. The steadfastness of Basque support for the Spanish Republic belied the Nationalist notion of a holy war. A major source of trouble for the Catholic Right's religious cru sade was the Nationalist government's campaign ofviolence against civilians, the most notorious being the attack on the town of Guer nica and the murders of Basque priests and civilians.25 Basque resist ance to Nationalist troops proved so resolute and unexpected that Franco decided to employ systematic terror to break the morale of the civilian population. Writing to Roberto Cantalupo, the Italian Ambassador to Nationalist Spain, Franco emphasized that he was not interested in territory but in the minds of its inhabitants. "The reconquest of the territory is the means, the redemption of the inhabitants the end."26 Franco's experiences in Africa had taught him that good government was assured by the endless intimidation of the ruled.27 In their "pacification'' of the northern Basque country the Na tionalists rounded up some three thousand Basques and nineteen labor missionary priests, all of whom were shot without trial. More than five hundred Basque priests were persecuted, imprisoned, or forced into exile.28 It may be the case that more Basque priests were executed by the Insurgent military in their campaign in the north ern provinces than the number of clergy killed in the earlier civil conflict in Mexico, a grisly event which deeply shocked and angered the American Catholic community, especially since the government of the United States did nothing about the carnage. The Mexican civil war made Catholics in America extremely sensitive to the vio lence against the Spanish Church.29 However, in contrast to the Mexican tragedy, the Vatican was essentially silent on the assassi nation of Basque priests.30 The Nationalists' modus operandi was far different from that of the Basques. The latter practiced political democracy, continued to champion social and economic reforms in agriculture and industry, abjured negative commentaries on Jews and Freemasons, and scrupu lously followed international rules governing treatment of prisoners and noncombatants. The Basques would not have continued their support of the Republican government if such policies had been
Against the Tide: The Catholic Critics of Franco 341
overruled. Their reactionary co-religionists on the other side, the Carlists and Castilians with the Nationalists, praised dictatorship, denigrated democracy, denounced international conventions con cerning prisoner exchange, and shot their opponents, including those who wore the collar. It was for these reasons that the Basques, in defeat, hoped to surrender to the Italians, who were appalled by the cruelty of the Spanish Catholic Rightists.31 General Franco's image outside Spain was seriously compro mised by the behavior of Nationalist troops in the Basque country. In its defense, the Burgos government claimed that the executed priests were agents of the Basque Nationalist Party. The Republi can government vigorously denied that this was the case, stating that not a single Basque priest even belonged to the PNV. 32 Equally troublesome was the fact that very little was written about the exe cutions in official Church publications. None of the media close to the Vatican, not even Osservatore Romano, published anything on the deaths of the Basque priests. According to canon law, Catho lics who perpetrate such crimes against clergymen are automatically excommunicated. Cardinal Goma, Spain's highest-ranking Church official, did not condemn the executions as such, though he did urge the rebels not to repeat such behavior. 33 The single greatest public relations problem for the National ists centered on the fate of the small Basque town of Guernica. On the afternoon of 26 April 1937 aviators ofthe German Condor Legion in Junker and Heinke! aircraft conducted a massive raid on Guer nica. The assault was chosen to coincide with market day, when the town would be filled with the maximum number of people. Guer nica was on the Nationalist army's line of march to Bilbao, the im portant industrial center of the Basque country. It was without defenses or military significance, but it was important as the ancient center of Basque culture. The bombardment lasted approximately three hours and a quar ter, during which aircraft unceasingly dropped an assortment of state-of-the-art German bombs, a good number of which were alu minum incendiary devices. In the midst of this :firestorm from above, Heinke! :fighters dropped from the skies and machine-gunned ter rified civilians who ran through the streets and fields for shelter.
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"The whole town of 7000 inhabitants, plus 3000 refugees, was slowly and systematically pounded to pieces. Over a radius of five miles round a detail of the raiders' technique was to bomb separate caseri6s, or farmhouses. In the night these burned like little candles in the hills." The above was part of the report of that day's events cabled by George Lowther Steer to the Times of London. The paper's cor respondent had arrived in Guernica from Bilbao on the night of 26 April. The story was reproduced in the New York Times on April 28. Steer was known as a superbly accurate and responsible observer, whose account of the tragedy remains a classic of reporting. 34 Steer described a town that was nearly completely engulfed in flames, the reflections of which could be seen in clouds some ten miles away. 35 The assault on Guernica represented something entirely new in military history: the terror bombing by air of civilians. It appears to have been deliberately engineered to break the morale of the Basque population so that Nationalist forces could take Bilbao more easily. The symbolic significance of the event was captured by Don Luigi Sturzo, who presciently observed a short while later that . . . in the past such bombardments were tolerated because they were not prominently in view. From now on, the history of future wars, in speaking of aerial bombings, will refer to Guer nica as now one refers to the Lusitania, in speaking of torpe doing by submarines. 36 George Steer's report on the events in Guernica was corrobo rated by two other British reporters and a Belgian journalist present in the town on the night of 26 April, who sent similar descriptions to their respective papers. It is noteworthy that Steer's report origi nally appeared in the Times, a conservative newspaper sympathetic to the Nationalist cause and one whose owner had been lobbying for a better understanding between Britain and Germany. There also were more than a hundred survivors who told essentially the same story. Among these eyewitnesses were the mayor of the town and some nine Basque priests, including Canon Alberto Onaindia of Valladolid, a man of "unchallengeable veracity,"37 who sent their
Against the Tide: The Catholic Critics of Franco 343
accounts to the pope. These stories were further confirmed by field research undertaken in Guernica by the historian Hugh Thomas in r959. 3 s The news from Guernica quickly became a public relations dis aster for the Nationalists, since the truth of the affair would give the lie to their claim that Franco's cause was a sacred one, a holy war to save Catholic Spain and Western civilization from Marxism. The task of holding back the rising tide of world outrage fell to Luis Bolin, whose office in Salamanca controlled information in the Nationalist zone. Bolin had always been overzealous as Chief of the Press Services of Nationalist Headquarters, a title and position which seems to have become his, at least in part, as a reward for hav ing arranged Franco's flight from the Canaries to Morocco. 39 As we have seen, Bolin's methods of censorship had made him widely loathed by foreign journalists. His style was to bully newsmen, mak ing it known that he would have them shot for "transgressions" in reporting. For example, the Count of Alba, who took orders from Bolin, told the American journalist John T. Whitaker that he was not to venture anywhere around Nationalist lines without permis sion from headquarters: "The next time you're unescorted to the front, we'll shoot you. We'll say that you were a casualty to enemy action. Do you understand?"40 In matters concerning the press, Bolin and his associates were guided by at least three imperatives: the conflict must be seen as a holy crusade; it must be portrayed as strictly a Spanish affair; and no mention could be made of the existence of foreign troops, especially German and Italian. For a time their strong-armed methods brought results: few newsmen working in the Nationalist zone dared write of massacres, or, for a good while at least, of the presence of Ger mans and Italians.41 Even after leaving Spain they did not speak out for fear that those reporters who remained would pay the price of their indiscretions. 42 Bolin crafted the initial denial of Nationalist responsibility for the Guernica bombing,43 and the explanation stuck. On 27 April Radio Nacional at Salamanca issued a sharp response entitled "Men tiras, mentiras y mentiras" ("Lies, Lies, Lies") . Franco's government claimed that there were no German or foreign aviators working for
344 CATHOLIC I N T ELLECTUALS AND T H E CHALLENGE O F D E M O C RACY
the Nationalists, and that Nationalist planes could not have bombed Guemica because the weather that day was too inclement for flight. 44 Guemica, claimed Radio Nacional, was burned not by bombs from the air but by arsonists on the ground, who, in fleeing, did not want to leave anything ofvalue for the advancing Nationalist army. S ala manca offered no evidence for such charges. There certainly were no Nationalist officials who could have investigated the matter: the so-called "official" statement was given a day after the bombing of Guernica and two days before the Nationalist army entered the city. Not long after this, however, the Nationalists began to contradict themselves, admitting that bombs may have been dropped (the craters left behind could not be ignored-the thousand-pound bombs made holes twenty-five feet deep) but claiming that Guernica, in any case, was of considerable military significance because of its strategic railway connections and armament factories. The explosive public outrage in Britain over the fire bombing of Guernica panicked the Friends of Nationalist Spain and galvanized them to action. Bolin, dismayed at the way the foreign press was making hay with Guernica, paid a personal visit to Franco. Through his efforts the Duke of Alba was appointed Franco's special agent in London. Alba, said Bolin, was as much at home in England as Spain. He had weight and influence, knew the right people, had entree everywhere, and was well "qualified to speak for us in the right quarters."45 Douglas Jerrold quickly emerged as the general spokesman of authority on the Guernica affair for the Nationalists. Jerrold served as the "visible commander" of the Guernica myth makers, but behind him stood the furtive but steady hand of the Marquis del Moral.46 Others who joined the fray as leading propa gandists were Arnold Lunn and Sir Henry Page Croft. The ensuing counterattack-according to one who received its harshest blows, the newsman who broke the story for the Times, George Lowther Steer-represented "some of the most horrible and inconsistent lying heard by Christian ears since Ananias."47 After visiting Nationalist Spain in March 1937, Jerrold, General J. F. C. Fuller, and Major Francis Yeats-Brown dedicated themselves to legitimizing Franco's endeavors. Their chief objective was to dis credit the Republican position on Guernica. Jerrold admitted that
Against the Tide: The Catholic Critics of Franco 3 45
Guernica was bombed "intermittently'' by the Germans (he claimed that there were military imperatives for doing so), but that the dam age was minimal. Jerrold essentially provided a reiteration of Bolin's thesis. The massive destruction was the result of the Basques burn ing their own town. Why? The 'incident' would stiffen the resistance of the Catholic Basques. It would influence neutral opinion; strengthen the attitude of the British government in regard to the blockade of Bilbao and possibly even lead to its abandonment.48 In order to substantiate his arguments that Guernica was fire bombed by the retreating Basques, Jerrold appears to have distorted the words of correspondents who observed the bombing in Guer nica and made false accusations about Steer's testimony.49 In the end, Bolin's and Jerrold's account became the Catholic Right's official version of the Guernica affair. Variations on this theme (complete with contradictions) were repeated regularly by such writers as Arnold Lunn, Arthur Bryant, Major Yeats-Brown, and Sir Henry Page Croft in England, and by a variety of influen tial American Catholics, including, among others, Father Joseph F. Thorning, Wilfrid Parsons, S.J. , and Father Joseph B . Code.50 Reflecting back on these tortured, casuistic arguments, Herbert Rutledge Southworth, author of the definitive work on Guernica, remarked that "it seems incredible that they were proposed by rational persons."51 The tragic events in Spain and the unmitigated violence against civilians and clergy on both sides were the apotheosis of Jacques Maritain's political prognostications. The cause of justice and humanity was overridden because both adversaries had succumbed to the ideology of dictatorial complexes, neither of which was com patible with Christian values. The Nationalists' program of terror against civilians and the totalitarian aspirations of their political order convinced Maritain and several other French Catholic intel lectuals to actively campaign against the idea of Franco's "holy war." It is important, however, to appreciate the fact that Maritain's campaign against the Spanish Civil War was also driven by his
346 CATHOLIC I N T ELLECTUALS AND T H E CHALLENGE O F D E M O C RACY
analysis of a fundamental weakness in modern industrial social structure of which capitalism was the central framework. Accord ing to Maritain's humanistic vision, the good society provided for the basic needs of the masses, assuring them of the right to work and fundamental spiritual satisfaction. The social significance of this humanism, wrote Maritain, was that it "should assume the task of radically transforming the temporal order, a task which would tend to substitute for bourgeois civilization, and for an economic system based on the fecundity of money, not a collectivist economy, but a 'personalistic' civilization and a 'personalistic' economy, through which would stream a temporal refraction of the truths of the Gospel. "52 Maritain's condemnation of capitalism as an amoral eco nomic system and, by extension, a source of trouble for Spain became yet another reason for the thunderous criticism brought down on him by conservative Catholics who had embraced the economic and political establishment.53 In Maritain's mind, the Spanish Civil War was emblematic of conditions preventing the emergence of a Chris tian social order. In Spain, the Church itself had seemed increas ingly aligned with the capitalist status quo. The events which had the most decisive impact on Maritain and his associates were the bombing of Guernica and the testimony of Canon Onaindia, who personally witnessed the catastrophe. On 8 May 1937 two Catholic dailies in Paris published a manifesto signed by numerous eminent Catholic intellectuals protesting the bombing and requesting an immediate end to the killing of non combatants.54 Soon after this Maritain and his friends formed the Committee for Civil and Religious Peace in Spain, an organization of people who pledged to work for an end to the Civil War. The effort was encouraged and sponsored by Cardinal Jean Verdier, the archbishop of Paris. The group had several objectives: it sought to help Catholics on the Loyalist side restore public worship; to miti gate the suffering brought on by the war; to protect the civilian population from harsh reprisals once one side found victory; and to influence international public opinion and governments toward finding a peaceful solution to the conflict in such a way as to allow the Spanish people the opportunity to live in freedom and dignity. The Committee made contacts with Catholic members of the Loy-
Against the Tide: The Catholic Critics of Franco 3 47
alist government and Basque leaders in order to help them obtain relief from anti-religious measures. Jacques Maritain made it a special point to speak out against those who depicted the events in Spain as a holy crusade for Chris tianity. He asserted that the very concept of a holy war only had meaning in a sacral civilization where the entire focus of life was reli gious. Such an ethos had disappeared with the waning of the Mid dle Ages. Modern man's orientation was now secular, not sacred, and his entire energies were concentrated on independence, free dom, and other such concerns of the temporal realm. In short, the direction of modern living was not "Godward" but pragmatic. It was contemporary man's independence from, rather than dependence upon, God that motivated his behavior. 55 Any attempt to carry the principle of holy war into secular, political squabbles could only result in making religion subservient to Mammon. Therefore, the notion of a Christian crusade could have no meaning whatsoever in a civilization that had become profane. 56 Maritain and his supporters believed that the emotive language of those who spoke of a holy crusade and who called down fire and brimstone on the Reds had the effect of both sowing hatred and inflaming the kind of passions that encouraged extremist behavior. This helped escalate the fratricidal violence and closed the door to any solutions requiring dispassionate, diplomatic compromise. Luigi Sturzo, for instance, argued that it was the "first duty" of responsible officials in the Church to eliminate the religious factor from the war motives in Spain, for not only was such a claim un-Christian (it was, said he, "entirely Mohammedan"), but it would arouse "in the name of religion the worst instincts of slaughter and extermination."57 The fiery propaganda of holy war certainly contributed to the terror of Nationalist repression. For its part the Republican gov ernment tried to throttle unauthorized violence against the Church and clergy carried out by anarchists and others. Although such vio lence had largely stopped by the end of 1936, sporadic violence against the clergy did continue throughout the Civil War in the Republi can zone. Both sides were guilty of pursuing a policy of physically liquidating their enemies. Yet on the Nationalist side the tempo of killing and terror was more systematic, and it actually increased as
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time went on, accelerating even further when the war was over. The Spanish clergy, caught up in the maelstrom of a crusade mentality, at no point questioned the necessity of this systematic purge. 58 Why would they have done otherwise, when Cardinal Coma, in his first public pronouncement on the war while celebrating the relief of the Alcazar, claimed that the day had arrived "on which Jews and Masons . . . threaten the national soul with absurd doctrines, with Tartar and Mongol ideas" and with a political and social system "manipulated by the Semitic International."59 Maritain's views on the Spanish conflict found corroboration from an unlikely quarter: the outspoken Catholic royalist, Georges Bernanos. 60 Bernanos and Maritain had fallen out with one another over the former's anti-Semitism and disagreements concerning the Church's condemnation of Action Fran;aise. Bernanos intrinsically reviled democracy and was the bete noir of liberal Catholics. It would be hard to find a more militant or reactionary Catholic than Bern anos. 61 In 1934 he moved his family to Spanish Majorca, partly to escape the deadening hand of bourgeois liberalism which he saw overtaking French urban life. Bernanos had a profound attraction to the medieval, mystical quality of Spanish Catholicism, which, for him, seemed to hold firm against a world rapidly falling under the sway of capitalism and communism. Before the generals' coup, Bernanos did not hide his fascist sympathies and violent feelings about what should be done to those responsible for the disorders of Spain. His former friend Francisco Ferrari Billoch pointed out that Bernanos advocated a root-and-branch change for Spain. Bern anos, wrote Billoch, "was not in favour of a coup d'etat which would confine itself to removing the Frente Popular from power; but, on the contrary, he favored a complete revolution which would last long enough for all the whole Communist class to be shot-yes, shot."62 At the beginning of the Nationalist revolt, Bernanos's son had be come a lieutenant with the Falangist forces, :fighting, in his father's view, a just war against the materialism and hypocrisy of the antichrist. As a resident of Majorca Bernanos soon became an eye-witness to one of the many savage sideshows of the Civil War. Majorca was occupied by Nationalist and Italian forces without any resistance. The reprisals that began after their arrival deeply shocked and re-
Against the Tide: The Catholic Critics of Franco 349
pelled Bernanos. The population of Majorca, Bernanos had earlier observed, was generally indifferent to politics. There were no facto ries, hence the absence of a significant working-class movement; even the head of the Majorcan Falange admitted that one could not find a hundred communists on the whole island. 63 The ensuing cam paign of terror against countless civilians who were falsely labeled "Reds" laid bare the hypocrisy of a crusade that was supposed to be both nationalist and Christian. The horrible carnal reality of the vicious purgation overturned Bernanos's political views.64 Bernanos witnessed Italian units on Majorca, with the aid of local Falangists, "cleaning up" the island by carrying off truckloads of farmers to be shot. His descriptions of these horrors bristled with rage. The peasants had just returned from the fields. Their clothes were still wet from the day's work. Left behind were the evening's soup on the table and a wife who arrived too late at the garden gate. Bernanos noted one ecclesiastical document sanctimoniously report ing that "only ten percent of those dear children refused the last sacraments before being dispatched by our good officers."65 It was not simply the killing that so incensed Bernanos. More disturbing was the behavior of the Church authorities in Majorca, who not only failed to speak out against these atrocities but openly and willingly gave their support to them. When the archbishop of Palma, Jose Miralles y Sbert, was questioned about the Church's position on the use of terror, he replied, wrote Bernanos, that excep tional measures were justified when during the previous year only 14 percent of the population performed their Easter duties. 66 This reign of terror would have long burned itself out, insisted Bernanos, but for the endorsement of priests and churchgoers who gave it reli gious sanction. Bernanos's explosive book, Les Grands Cimetieres Sous La Lune (published in English as The Diary ofMy Times), was more than an expose of the assassinations in Majorca, which certainly had revolted his conscience and altered his political thinking. Above all, it was an angry protest against the clergy for aiding and abetting the fascist terror against innocent civilians. The Spanish Church, Bernanos announced, failed in its mission as father to the people, as a con ciliator and healer. Bernanos described a clergy who, for the sake
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of expedience, came down swiftly and unequivocally on the side of a dictatorship every bit as evil as communism. He believed this would prove suicidal for the Church, since the alliance with Franco could only lead to a permanent estrangement of the masses from Christianity. Bernanos's account of events in Majorca was written largely for his right-wing associates in France, who, like himself, had pined for a fascist-type revolution to sweep out the "trash" of liberal democ racy. As Thomas Molnar has noted, Bernanos knew the number and names of people on both the Left and Right who were waiting to play the same roles in France. When the war first broke out, Bern anos wrote in his diary that he was grateful to the Lord for having given him the opportunity to witness "a kind of general rehearsal of the universal revolution." But three months later, following the occupation of Majorca, the tone shifted: "Now the hyenas appear on the scene. What follows is not for people like you and me . . . . A counter-revolution is not at all what the idiots think it is, back in France." By the beginning of 1937 Bernanos wrote that he was in the midst of a nightmare: "I am witnessing a revolution made by the military and the clericalists. It is a disgusting spectacle and it would be hard to imagine so paradoxical a mixture of cynicism and hypocrisy."67 Like Maritain and others who had recognized the hypocrisy of "holy war" from afar, Bernanos, having personally experienced the fires of civil war, discovered that his beloved medieval and mystical Spanish Church had forsaken the common man and tied its cause to that of the privileged classes and their brutal right-wing protec tors. Whereas Hilaire Belloc and his circle had viewed the Spanish Civil War as a struggle for the survival of European Christianity after all, claimed Belloc, "Europe is the faith, and the faith is Europe"-Bernanos saw something else: "Christianity has been the making of Europe. Christianity is dead. And therefore Europe must die too."68 Conservative Catholics and those associated with the political right launched a vigorous assault against the critics of Franco's cru sade. 69 One of the early casualties of this campaign was the liberal journal Sept, which had dedicated itself to the promotion of social reform and democratic, pluralistic forms of social organization.
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From its inception in March 1934 Sept had applied Maritain's po litical principles to the Spanish Civil War and had urged Catholics to take a position of neutrality on the conflict. The magazine was forced to close down under orders of the Holy Office in Rome because its Dominican editor, Reverend Bernadot, refused to sup port the pro-Franco position advocated by the anticommunist papal secretary of state, Cardinal Pacelli. 70 The rise of Pacelli, the future Pope Pius XII, meant the increasing domination of conservative clerics in the Vatican. In August 1937 the Holy Office formally rec ognized Franco as head of the legitimate government of Spain, and a papal nuncio was sent to his capital. One of Pacelli's first acts when elevated to the papacy was the lifting of his predecessor's ban on Action Franraise. Jacques Maritain became the chief target of the Right's attack. He was identified as the ringleader of muddleheaded and disloyal Catholics ("chretiens rouges," as the French right-wing press called them) who strayed from what the Right regarded as a Vatican party line. Such voices of criticism had contacts with reactionary elements in the Vatican, and the general effect of their denunciation was to engender a hostile climate of suspicion against independent think ing in the conservative Catholic press throughout Europe and the Americas. Some of these sources gave the impression that Maritain's anti-Francoism was the product of insidious Jewish influence.71 In Britain the attack on Maritain and recusant Catholic atti tudes on Spain was spearheaded by Reginald Dingle, who was given a prominent forum in the Jesuit journal, The Month. A distinctive feature of the Catholic Right's attack on their co-religionists was a resolute refusal to assess the allegation of Nationalist terror against civilians. Dingle in his articles, for example, made vague passing ref erences to the "lurid accounts of Guernica" but insisted that the "comfortable theory" concerning atrocities committed by both sides could not stand up to serious analysis. 72 Dingle never bothered to examine the facts himself, instead preferring to fall back on the so called "unimpeachable testimony" of the Spanish bishops' joint let ter to the "Bishops of the World." This letter was published in July 1937 at the request of the Nationalist government in Burgos to convince international Catho lic opinion that Franco's rebellion was justified on religious grounds.
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Cardinal Goma was given the task of writing the document, an undertaking he willingly accepted given his strong anticommunist sentiments. The signatories explained that since 1931 the Republic, with Bolshevik aid, had engineered a legislative revolution to eradi cate the traditional framework of Spanish culture. The Comintem ultimately assumed a more direct role in this effort when it armed "a revolutionary militia to seize power." The bishops claimed to have "irrefutable" documentary evidence of a communist coup in Spain (documents the British Foreign Offi ce determined were forgeries). Thus Franco's military revolt was a justified response to a conspir acy to destroy religion in Spain. It was a "civic-military" venture by the best-qualified civilians and military leaders carried out primar ily to preserve the Church and the basic national traditions of Spain.73 Contrary to Nationalist propaganda, the joint letter did not ex press the unanimous opinions of the Spanish bishops. Two episcopal signatures were notably missing, those of the cardinal-archbishop of Tarragona, Francese Vidal i Barraquer, and Mateo Mugica, the bishop of Vitoria in the Basque country. Both were in exile because of persecution by communists but refused to sign the letter. The Bishop of Vitoria had defended the Basque priests against Franco's purges and had made the awkward accusation that there was no reli gious freedom in Nationalist Spain. A number of Catholics abroad were also distressed by the Spanish bishops' allegation that the Basque leaders were blinded by narrow sectarian political interests, and that they had taken the side of communism against Catholi cism. This assessment, as Luigi Sturzo pointed out, had failed to take into account the fact that the Nationalists and various parties of the Spanish Right had refused to recognize the historic rights of the Basques.74 The credibility of the bishops' letter was further compromised by the political associations of the moving force behind the docu ment, Cardinal Goma. Long before the military revolt the Cardi nal had waxed ebullient on his affections for Mussolini and Hitler. In a 1934 speech in Buenos Aires, for example, he had urged his audience to cast its eyes reverently to the old world, for "over the sea which has interred the democracies, stand forth the summits of the dictatorships."75 Goma's subsequent writings and radio broadcasts
Against the Tide: The Catholic Critics of Franco 353
revealed a fixation with leftist conspiracies: Freemasons, Jews, and communists, he claimed, were out to destroy Spain. The Catholic Right validated its interpretation of the Spanish Civil War by drawing on the "irrefutable truth" of the collective let ter to the "Bishops of the World," which in itself was a highly par tisan and polemical political document, written primarily to link the Church with Spanish nationalism as defined by Franco. By casting this letter in the rubric of episcopal approval and in the context of the universality of Catholic principles, the supporters of Franco could argue that there was no need to give the causes of the Civil War further analysis. In short, the bishops' letter precluded the necessity of examining the issues for onesel£76 Reginald Dingle criti cized Maritain for an ivory-tower approach to politics, far removed from the everyday realities that informed the Spanish bishops: . . . all that he has written on the Spanish issue confirms the impression that a long sojourn in the realm of pure ideas may lead to an imperfect appreciation of facts and to a failure to give them their due importance in contingent matters, with which politics is mainly concerned.77 Yet, in the same essay in which he charged that Maritain was insufficiently engaged, Dingle made the curious assertion that although the conduct of Franco could be evaluated only in light of all the facts, it was not a Catholic's responsibility to pass judgment on such matters. Instead, in Dingle's line of thinking, Catholics had a religious responsibility to support the Nationalist cause. It would appear that the stalwart crusader should suspend moral judgment concerning complex social and political issues, for the die already had been cast; the overriding religious dimension was fixed, once the proper authorities determined that Russia via the Popular Front had decided to extirpate Catholicism from Spain. This was at the core of Dingle's attacks on Maritain, and was repeated in similar form by all other such critics. The "philosopher mystic," as Dingle called him, failed to "see the facts for the general principles"; the "principle" in this case was Maritain's refusal to become a partisan in a strug gle which Dingle's "facts" had established as purely religious.78
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Since the war in Spain was a crusade, there could be no room for dissent. The point was clarified for the confused by Douglas Woodruff's The Tablet, which printed a theological defence of Franco by Salamanca University Dominicans: "resistance to the Popular Front is not only right and lawful but also obligatory-a holy war."79 Joseph Keating, S.J. , editor of The Month, could write of his surprise at the liberty the Church permitted French Catho lics who opposed the idea of a Nationalist crusade, since to challenge it and even to attack fascism could be seen as an assault on the Church itsel£80 The Nationalists, wrote Keating, were courageously fighting off "an unholy alliance of Jews, Freemasons and atheists, but we Catholics can give them the support of our sympathy and prayers."81 Reginald Dingle, for his part, did not mince words when he described the folly of the recusants: all notable French Catholics who opposed the White Crusade were unbalanced and aberrant, hovering on the "dangerous edge" of heresy. 82 Even Christopher Dawson, a supporter of Franco, came under fire as editor of the Dub lin Review for not sufficiently echoing the Catholic Right's united front on Franco as the "last Crusader." Dawson's boss, Douglas Jer rold, was greatly annoyed at Dawson's decision to publish articles on Maritain and Bernanos. Jerrold eventually ousted his former mentor from the editorial chair in a maneuver that was anything but pretty. 83 This crusading mind-set meant that Georges Bernanos's Les Grands Cimetiires Sous La Lune would be greeted with the venom of vipers. Adding to this poisonous mix was the bitterness of right wing Catholics who had already become suspicious of Bernanos's "orthodoxy" when he had turned against Action Franraise in the mid-193os. Maurras' paper launched the campaign against "the trai tor Bernanos" when it published a letter condemning his book, writ ten by the archbishop of Parma, whom Bernanos had singled out as the quintessential evil Churchman for having aided and abetted the Nationalist atrocities in Majorca. It is important to point out that few, if any, rightist responses to Bernanos's book bothered to ana lyze the serious charges he brought against the Church's complicity in the terror. In fact, in the United States there was some hesitation in the Catholic press to even mention the book.84 The Month labeled Les Grands Cimetiires Sous La Lune "shallow in its Catholicity, vio-
Against the Tide: The Catholic Critics of Franco 355
lent and ill-balanced," but the magazine had nothing to say about the issues it raised. 85 The Tablet, without a single word about the book's central arguments, simply said that there was nothing in the conduct of the Nationalists to justify its author's abusive compari sons of the "hypothetical massacres of the 'poor' as Marxists with the all too real massacres of priests."86 The Month was one of the few Catholic publications in Britain to give Bernanos's book the lengthy review it deserved. However, the reviewer, James Broderick, unleashed a polemical diatribe against Bernanos, discussing virtually nothing of the book's thesis. As to the three thousand or so civilians Bernanos claimed were murdered by Nationalists and Italians, Broderick could only say that more evi dence was needed, especially since Bernanos himself was like a chameleon (he turned his back first on Action Franraise and then on Franco), changing his color from one page to the next. The thrust of Broderick's review was that Bernanos represented a twentieth century version of the Roman Tertullian, a soul-destroying, puri tanical fanatic whose self-righteous Christian bullying pushed him into the heresy of Montanism. Like Tertullian, Bernanos's call for honesty, fairmindedness, and compassion presumably was demand ing too much of Christians. Broderick rejected Bernanos's charges (without articulating what they were for his readers) and called the book a nightmarish fantasy. Without mustering a single shred of evidence to substantiate his argument, and rejecting out of hand Bernanos's eyewitness testimony, Broderick could write that it was an open question whether the Nationalist authorities were exces sively draconian in their administration ofjustice on Majorca. 87 II
In Britain and America the Christian crusaders for Franco were challenged by a small but intellectually significant minority of Catholic journals and newspapers. The two best known in Britain were the quarterly Dublin Review (which opened its pages to the views of Don Luigi Sturzo) and Black.friars, the English Domini can monthly. 88 In the United States the only major Catholic journal
356 CATHOLIC I NTELLECTUALS AND T H E CHALLENGE O F D E M O C RACY
to resist the crusaders was Commonweal, and its decision to do so produced a serious internal conflict and a precipitous decline in readership. 89 Blackfriars attempted to replicate in England the work of the French Dominicans, who assiduously opposed European fascism on Thomistic grounds from its very inception. As regards Spain, its Dominican editors recognized that the problems were too complex to be caused by communism alone and pointed out that if the Span ish Church had taken seriously the messages of papal labor encycli cals, there might well have been no civil war.90 What especially concerned Blackfriars was an issue largely ignored by its British Catholic counterparts ( The Tablet, The Month, the Universe, the Catholic Times, G.K s Weekly, and the Weekly Review): the political turpitude of those states that came to the aid of Franco. Might not this make the remedy of fascism to save Christianity worse than the disease? Blackfriars noted that with the exception of the first out burst of anti-religious terror against the clergy, which was largely beyond the control of the Azafia government, Hitler's persecution of the Church and its servants was every bit as evil as the policies of anticlerical groups who supported the Republic. Blackfriars urged Catholics not to confuse two distinctly different kinds of anticom munism: that of the pagan, hate-inspired Nazis, whose policies were scarcely less poisonous than Bolshevism itself, and that of Christianity.91 Blackfriars's anti-fascism did not go unchallenged by Catholics on the right. Bernard Wall in the Colosseum, for example, who was a good friend of Father Victor White, O . S . B . , the paper's editor, considered Blackfriarss condemnation of fascism too sweeping and extreme. Essentially, argued Wall, democracy and liberalism were at least as dangerous and anti-Catholic as Mussolini's brand of poli tics.92 Donald Attwater, in support of Blackfriars's position, wrote that Christian anti-Bolshevism fights its enemy by understanding and removing the social and economic factors that cause people to embrace communism in the first place. The causes of commu nism, emphasized Attwater, cannot be fought with the politics of the Right. They can only be fought with true religion: "One of the gravest dangers is that religious people allow themselves to be
Against the Tide: The Catholic Critics of Franco 357
thrown by communist violence and success into the arms of oppo site parties in which Christians should not be found."93 On the other hand, Douglas Woodruff's The Tablet disagreed: the Church cer tainly does have sympathy and good will for Fascism, it confidently asserted, just as she does for democracy.94 Blackfriars's approach to the issues of Spain and fascism was sup ported by an association of English Catholics and other like-minded Christians who, under the direction of Virginia Crawford (a pupil of Cardinal Manning and admirer of Frederic Ozanam),95 formed in 1936 the "People and Freedom Group" and launched a paper, People and Freedom. Crawford's association sought to educate youth in the principles of Christian democracy. Its mottoes were Magna est Veritas et Praevalebit against the lying propaganda of fascists, and Fiat justitia in opposition to Britain's appeasement policy toward the dictators. The People and Freedom Group immediately declared its opposition to the Spanish Civil War and, in alliance with the Maritain circle, formed an English branch of the Paris-based Com mittee for Civil and Religious Peace in Spain. Its purpose was to work for conciliation between both sides in the Civil War and to prevent a fascist-style dictatorship from coming into power.96 One of the most prudent and objective English commentators on the issue of Spain was Father Gerald Vann, O.P., founder of the Union of Prayer for Peace and a professor at the Dominican Black friar's School. A neo-Thomist in the tradition of Maritain, Father Vann, like Don Luigi Sturzo, recognized the impossibility of dis entangling religion from the social, political, and economic factors behind the Spanish Civil War. Vann cautioned Catholics about reducing the struggle to issues of mere religion. "To simplify is to falsify," wrote Vann, for the conflict also involved issues of class, regional autonomy, and political philosophies, the complexities of which made it impossible to sort the warring sides into neat cate gories of good and evil. Catholics who refused to recognize such facts, claimed Vann, had falsified the issue and, in doing so, caused the Church to be identified with a position contrary to the teach ings of Christ. Although it seemed natural to support the side that identified with the faith, not many considered what sort of Catholic Spain might emerge from the conflict. What were the implications
35 8 CATHOLIC I N T ELLECTUALS AND T H E CHALLENGE OF D E M O C RACY
for the new order when the Right had savaged the Catholic Basques and refused to accept the teaching of the social encyclicals? Pro Franco Catholics in a tempest of rage had forsaken critical reason ing for a "one-track'' religious crusade: ''la co/ere des imbeciles remplit le monde." Not content with this, the Catholic Right, lamented Vann, had gone on to denounce all those who refused to share such simple-mindedness and co/ere as traitors to the faith. In so doing the Catholic defenders of Franco had fallen into the same mind-set as that of the Left, which identified everything emanating from the Nationalists as reactionary and fascist. It is not possible for Catho lics, claimed Vann, to sell the truth to political expediency without paying for the treason of allying with the enemies of Christ. 97 Gerald Vann's jeremiads dovetailed with the assessment of Catho licism's most experienced critic of fascism, Don Luigi Sturzo. Writ ing in the Dublin Review (January 1937), S turzo likened the Christian crusade in Spain to the folly of the nineteenth-century Holy Alliance, which had been opposed by Pope Pius VII for essentially the same reasons that the Vatican remained aloof from the Span ish affair. Sturzo recognized that the Church's aims might run par allel at times with the policies of particular rulers and political movements, but these aims should never be identified completely with secular affairs; in order to give its full weight to spiritual prob lems the Church must be freed from political entanglements that would have the effect of subordinating religious issues to secular ends. It would be especially unwise, said Sturzo, for the Church to identify herself with totalitarian regimes simply because they were directed by Catholic rulers. This would require accepting responsi bility for the state's oppression of dissenting populations and, equally immoral, associating a sacred institution with the profane myths (of race, class, empire, nationality, and so forth) which are the raison d'etre of such regimes. The Church, insisted Sturzo, must pursue the same policy followed in the previous century when she maintained her autonomy above the political forms of liberalism, democracy, and socialism.98 Sturzo had been diligent in his efforts to expose the hypocrisy of Hitler's and Mussolini's version of the Christian crusade against communism. As he demonstrated in numerous articles over the
Against the Tide: The Catholic Critics of Franco 3 59
years, their own anti-Soviet policies were adapted to ends that had nothing to do with religion. Hitler's anticommunist campaign was clearly bogus, since the Nazis had several friendly agreements with Russia prior to 1935, shifting gears only after a treaty had been drawn up between Russia and France. Even more duplicitous was Mus solini's anticommunism. Fascist Italy had a long record of friendly relations with Moscow, distinguishing itself as the first Western state to recognize Lenin's government. Sturzo also noted that Moscow was the first nation to support the withdrawal of sanctions after Italy's invasion of Abyssinia. In short, modern states established their poli cies on the basis of national interests, and to support dictatorships because of their publicly-stated religious policies was both foolish and dangerous. Contemporary dictators simply used religion to legitimize political and cultural objectives that were inherently un Christian. 99 Sturzo fully accepted Jacques Maritain's analysis of the troubles in Spain as well as his solution to the problems of Church-state rela tions as outlined in Integral Humanism (1936). Like Maritain, Sturzo in his writings criticized the notion that the conflict in Spain was essentially religious. Religion, as Sturzo labored to point out, was originally a subsidiary issue, although it became a central part of the Right's justification for overthrowing the Republican government. In fact, the Insurgents' pronunciamiento made no mention of reli gion, and even General Emilio Mola, one of the leading conspira tors, was slow in adopting the jargon of the "cruzada." Apparently, he did so only after the Spanish Church encouraged the idea.100 The generals' main justification for rebellion was the necessity of chal lenging the basic tenets of the French Revolution, which the con servative officers believed were being replicated by the Republican government. The religious motive certainly served to sustain the Nationalist cause, but the matters that substantially divided the two sides were political and social. The case of the Basques proved the point. In general, wrote Sturzo, the lines of demarcation were not absolute. Many Spaniards had to work through the issues on the bases of conscience, class, and geographical interests. In any case, the depiction of the Spanish conflict as a "holy war," claimed Sturzo, was blasphemous and contrary to Christian doctrine. The concept
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was Islamic: the ''Jihad" meant an armed conquest for the faith of Mohammed in which the kingdom of God would be established through the physical destruction of every other religion. 101 Finally, Sturzo, along with Maritain and his friends, challenged the Catholic Right's defense of the pronunciamiento on the grounds of a "just war." In their attempts to establish an interdenominational coalition against communism in Spain, the United Christian Front Committee in Great Britain, for example, had cited St. Thomas's writings on civil disobedience as a justification of Franco's war against the Republic.102 Much of the groundwork on this question had been done in France. In 1925 Charles Maurras was prosecuted for threatening to assassinate the minister of the interior. His organization, Action Franfaise, had also advocated the forcible overthrow of the anti clerical Republican government. Out of this developed a public dis cussion regarding the right to resist unjust laws and tyrannical government. The Jesuit review Etudes gathered a number of opin ions from jurists, philosophers, and theologians on the matter, and Pere Michel Riquet published them under the title Enquete sur !es Droits du Droit et Sa Majesti la Loi. Pere Riquet concluded that from Deguit to St. Thomas, from Locke to Bellarmine, there had been common agreement that one may use violence to oppose the execution of unjust law. But action of this kind must be measured by the demands of the common good. This position had already been underlined by Pope Leo XIII in his letter to the French bishops in February 1892 concerning Catholics and the French Republic. Acceptance of the new government, he asserted, "is not only per mitted, but demanded . . . by the necessity of the social weal which has made them and maintains them." This duty would persist, he added, "so long as the exigencies of the common good demanded it, since in society this good is, after God, the first and last law."103 The central question regarding justified rebellion concerned cases in which the "exigencies of the common good" might no longer demand public support. This problem was examined carefully in the encyclical Nos es muy, issued by Pius XI in September 1932, address ing the religious problem in Mexico. Here, for the first time, a mod ern pope drew a distinction between an unjust and just rebellion against civil authority. In this encyclical Pius XI asserted that the
Against the Tide: The Catholic Critics of Franco 3 61
citizenry had the right to defend their freedoms through "lawful and appropriate" means (that is to say, by means not intrinsically bad), but such actions should be proportionate to the end and employed in such a manner as to save the community from greater evils than those they sought to remedy. 104 In Sturzo's view, the conditions established in Nos es muy regard ing means and ends were not sufficient to justify the pronunciami ento. In Spain, Sturzo asserted, there was no fundamental Christian moral standoff between citizens and tyrant but rather a conflict between two sections of one people each determined to destroy the other. The affair was inherently secular and therefore did not fit the Christian moral imperatives governing legitimacy of rebellion. 105 Religion was certainly a factor in the Spanish Civil War, but Sturzo believed it was blown entirely out of proportion in the "impassioned atmosphere" of the "frenzied religious persecutions" of the early stages of the rebellion, thereby obscuring the more central social, economic, and political issues.106 A certain religious criticism is not unfounded, he insisted, "but it is too general."107 Sturzo's position was echoed in many other Catholic quarters as well. Maritain, for example, noted that rather than improving the status quo-one of the imperatives of the "just war"-the pronun ciamiento had led to the intervention of foreign forces and the murders of thousands of innocent people on both sides. The psy chological and political damage would not heal for generations: Think of the priests slain, the nuns outraged . . . . Think of the women and children slaughtered by aerial bombardments . . . . Think of the cities of Spain-among the noblest of cities which have become proving grounds for international air forces. Picture the exhaustion of the country, the immense damage, physical and moral . . . the accumulation of hatred and bitter ness amassed on both sides, the despair of so many souls. And tell me what good one can expect from such a civil war and its pitiless prolongation.108 Pope Pius XI on 14 September 1936 in his address to Spanish exiles warned of the danger of allowing party interests to cloud the morality of their actions. In subsequent statements regarding the
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conflict in Spain the Vatican offered nothing to suggest a crusade or holy war. In fact, there is sufficient evidence to suggest that Pope Pius XI wished Catholics to follow a policy of neutrality on the civil war in Spain.109 Several influential Catholic organs in France, Ger many, Belgium, and Switzerland also rejected the pronunciamiento as a justified response to civil tyranny.110 It is worthy of note that in more recent times Pope John Paul II has publicly denounced the idea of religious war. In his welcoming address to the assembly of the World Conference on Religion and Peace in the Vatican City on 3 November 1994, John Paul II said that killing or waging war in the name of religion was a blatant contradiction: "No one can consider himself faithful to the great and merciful God who in the name of the same God dares to kill his brother."111 Sturzo gave the lie to the accolades offered Franco in his role as a latter-day El Cid, an image carefully cultivated by the dictator and willingly devoured by his sycophantic rightist Catholic sup porters. Nor did he regard Franco as the pure fascist that the Left made him out to be. In reality, Franco was never loyal to either the creed of fascism or the creed of Catholicism; he only used their nomenclature, enthusiasms, and some of their programs to solidify his own personal power. Sturzo concluded that in the final analysis it all made little difference, for if we call it Fascism or Communism, though each be placed at the opposite ends of the arch of a pendulum, they have the same impulses, the same fundamental concepts, namely: the spirit of violence and the use of force as a means to acquire and maintain power, the subordination of the legal rights and moral values of the human personality to the interests of the State, the loss, be it gradual or violent, of Liberty!112 III
The outbreak of civil war in July 1936 prompted Francis X. Talbot, S.J., editor of the influential Jesuit magazine America, to call a meet ing of New York's Catholic editors to discuss whether a common
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position should be taken on the Spanish conflict. At this meeting, to which Talbot had invited an agent of Franco's government, the managing editor of Commonweal, George Shuster, suggested that it would be prudent to gather additional information; he proposed inviting Gil Robles, the leader of the Catholic Party who was presently in exile and soon to arrive in New York, to address the group regarding what should or should not be done by the Catho lic Press. Shuster believed that his recommendation was accepted, but it soon became clear that Talbot felt confident enough con cerning the issues to launch his own campaign for Franco. Although Shuster thought that Talbot had been "pressured" into making pro paganda for the lnsurgents,113 the Jesuit's monarchist inclinations and close contacts with certain individuals of the Spanish Right would have swung America into the battle on Franco's side in any case. Father Talbot seems to have been a bit of a romantic concern ing Spain, and, according to Shuster, he was more suited by train ing and disposition to write poetry than to discuss political affairs.114 America's initial response to the crisis in Spain was considerably searching. Its editorials cited the social failures of the old regime as a major source of the troubles. Problems spawned by land monop olies and absentee landlords, together with the poverty and igno rance of peasants and workers, were all analyzed as the results of the apathy and greed of an entrenched Spanish ruling class. The only way to ameliorate the communist menace that these conditions en couraged, claimed the editor ofAmerica, was to eliminate the social misery on which it fed. This could be accomplished only in a soci ety organized along Christian lines. 115 However, soon after the pro nunciamiento, following directly on the heels of the meeting of Catholic editors summoned by Father Talbot, America came out solidly in favor of Franco and the Insurgents. Irrespective of what kind of regime the Right might create, claimed Talbot, it could never be as evil as that promised by the Red government currently in power. Those who viewed Franco as reactionary, asserted America, were simply "lovers of communism and Sovietism."116 George Shuster was surprised by Talbot's rush to judgment and decided to respond in Commonweal by warning Catholics of the danger of a fascist victory in Spain. Franco's admiration of Hitler
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and Mussolini, he feared, might well mean the application of total itarianism to that country. Fascism, as practiced in Italy and Ger many, wrote Shuster, was the antithesis of the social reforms needed in Spain. Although the dictators gave rhetorical service to religion, there was no possibility that fascism would serve Christianity. Thus Catholics should not applaud the rebels: "The lessons of history are too plain for that."117 Commonweal was deluged with irate letters charging the editor with giving aid and comfort to the enemies of the Church. Yet these were trifling compared to the outburst of anger resulting from Com monweal 's publication of an article by Barbara Barclay Carter, an English Catholic journalist and translator of Don Luigi Sturzo, out lining how European Catholics viewed the Spanish conflict. Carter's essay gave credence to Shuster's warnings, pointing out that many influential European Catholics had condemned the idea of a "holy war" in Spain (she noted that the Basques and many supporters of the Popular Front were in fact Catholic) and were deeply fearful of a fascist take-over. 118 George Shuster's views on the Spanish situation were strongly influenced by his knowledge of what was happening to the Catho lic Church in Germany. Shuster had been a careful observer of Ger man affairs, having undertaken two lengthy tours of study in that country, the second of which (1933-34) coincided with the rise of Hitler to power.119 He was the first American journalist to expose the Nazi war on religion.120 Disturbed by Hitler's failure to uphold agreements established by the Concordat with the Church, in par ticular the Nazi ban on Catholic athletic organizations and the regime's anti-Semitic policies, Shuster in 1935 tried to enlist support for a boycott of the 1936 Olympic Games scheduled in Berlin.121 These efforts were resisted by the archdiocese of New York, how ever, and without this important institutional support Shuster's plans collapsed. Shuster was associated with a small group of Catholics in New York who met frequently to discuss the Church's struggles with European fascism. Among these were Heinrich Bruening, the exiled former chancellor of Germany, who was in seclusion under an as sumed name at the Immaculate Conception Seminary in Hunting-
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ton, Long Island, 122 Carleton J. H. Hayes, professor of history at Columbia University, and the anti-Nazi refugee priest, H. A. Rein hold. Shuster found Reinhold especially helpful regarding the cur rent situation of Catholics in Germany.123 The group was also in close contact with Luigi Sturzo and the eminent German Jesuit, Friedrich Muckermann, publisher of the anti-Nazi Der deutsche Weg and an ally of H. A. Reinhold's, who was then in Rome and able to keep his friends informed about Vatican affairs.124 Shuster received much valuable information from these contacts about events in Ger many. Nazi violence against the clergy and their perfidious evasion of Concordat agreements made Shuster particularly sensitive about the possible impact of fascist ideology and programs on religious life in Spain. Shuster answered Commonweal's critics in a lengthy article enti tled "Some Reflections on Spain," which appeared on 12 April 1937· It was prefaced by a statement from the editor and founder of Com monweal, Michael Williams, who expressed his disagreement with Shuster's analysis. Williams was convinced that communism and anarchism were far more responsible for the troubles in Spain than Shuster suggested. There were at least three key points to Shuster's arguments on the Spanish Civil War. First, he asserted that Catholic supporters of Franco as well as those on the Left were simplifying the issues. Reliable, authoritative information on Spain was difficult to obtain, owing to great passion and violence perpetrated by both sides. In any case, Shuster had never found conservative Catholics in Britain (the source of most pro-Franco sentiment) particularly open-minded or committed to Christian notions of truth and justice. In 1933 Shus ter had visited London to enlist the major Catholic journals in a campaign opposing Nazi laws against non-Aryan Christians. "To my amazement," he claimed, "these gentlemen looked upon every adverse reference to Hitler as 'French Propaganda. ' " Ever since then, lamented Shuster, "I have found it difficult to believe that the palm for objective visualization of major Catholic problems was to be hung on certain quasi-official door-posts in London."125 Shus ter pointed out, however, that there were many well-informed, reli able European Catholic narrators on continental politics who did
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not accept the assertion that communism was the sole cause of the Spanish Civil War. Their reports made it abundantly clear that Franco was not a white knight selflessly battling S atan for Christ. The methods employed by Franco against his opponents-especially the Basques-were proof enough of this mistaken notion. How could such a regime represent Catholic interests or protect the faith? More over, Shuster pointed out to his readers that the source of propa ganda for Franco as savior of the Catholic religion and culture was none other than that "eminent defender ofthe faith, Dr. Goebbels."126 The above problem raised a second issue for Shuster. Pro Franco Catholics, he warned, were ignoring the "shadows which fall upon the scene from without." Shuster and his associates knew far more about what was happening in Europe than did the Talbot group (their intelligence, for example, indicated that there was a good chance that the French armies in North Africa could invade the homeland, overthrow the Popular Front government, and make common cause with fascism) .127 What kind of arrangements had Franco made with Mussolini and Hitler? What was the extent of Italian and German involvement in Spain? Why was it, asked Shus ter, that a dictator who put Alfred Rosenberg in the saddle to destroy the Catholic Church in Germany felt it his duty to save Catholicism in Spain? Finally, Shuster focused attention on Spanish Catholicism itself as a major source of the problem. Making reference to Father Lud wig Veit's definitive study of the nineteenth-century Spanish Church, Shuster pointed out that the Spanish hierarchy was forced to depend on a state hostile to even the most elementary demands of social jus tice. Veit himself had warned that unless working-class and peasant problems were addressed, the blows struck against religion in Spain would replicate the violence brought down upon the Church in revolutionary France. It was the despair of the Catholic proletariat, argued Shuster, that brought success to Marxism and anarchism in Spain. Catholic reaction to Shuster's "Reflections" on the Spanish situ ation was quick and vexatious. Within the week he received volumes of hate mail, including threats to his life. The New York Chancery, seemingly the command headquarters for Franco's cause, phoned
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Shuster's parish priest in Connecticut inquiring whether he at tended Sunday Mass regularly. The most mean-spirited assaults came from the Coughlinite Brooklyn Tablet, which depicted Franco as "the George Washington of Spain." Shuster could only conclude from all this that Catholic New York had envisioned the world out side America as engaged in a Manichean struggle between the fol lowers of Mussolini and Hitler and the devotees of Karl Marx, and it had therefore come down on the side of fascism.128 Perhaps the greatest disappointment to Shuster was Father Tal bot's attack, which appeared in a lengthy editorial in America. Both men had nourished a long personal relationship and respected each other's convictions. As opposed to Shuster, Talbot asserted that "Moscowism'' was the greater danger in Spain. Franco, he claimed, was no fascist and could be relied on to bring a Catholic social order to Spain. Talbot accused Shuster's anti-Francoism of "splitting the influence of corporate Catholicism'' and thus giving succor to the Church's enemies. Shuster's writings, claimed Talbot, amounted to an arsenal of "ammunition for all the Communistically controlled organizations in this country."129 Shuster quickly responded to Talbot's charges, though it marked the last time he would do so as editor of Commonweal. Hoping to disabuse Talbot of his sympathy for communism, Shuster defined himself as a "Borah Republican and, I hope, a Catholic," who wished to see the establishment of a sound conservative social order in Spain.130 He wanted neither a dictatorship of the left nor a dicta torship of the right in Spain. Especially troubling to Shuster was the impression conveyed by certain influential Catholics that fascism could be tamed by the Church and that its inherent sins were far less evil than communism. Both were evil, and the two shared similar methods and objectives. As regards Germany, Shuster made this prescient observation: "a system is coming into being which differs so little from 'Moscow ism' that the eventual alliance between the two states is no longer the fear of just a few dreamy mortals."131 One of Shuster's greatest fears was the negative repercussion on the working class as well as on general public opinion brought about by Catholics who linked their religion with the aims of Franco and
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his reactionary and fascist supporters. The "patriotic tradition" to which Franco appealed was a shibboleth; behind it lay a policy crafted to freeze the old social order in the interests of the wealthy and privileged. The condition oflabor in Spain was worse than any where else in Europe, owing largely to the Spanish Church's fail ure to promote social justice. It was the despair of the Catholic proletariat, argued Shuster, that fueled the success of communism and anarchism in Spain. A true conservative Christian social order could never be constructed through an alliance with Franco's vari ant of fascism, since, like its Moscow-based totalitarian twin, it rested on the concept of a purely autarkic economy which subordi nated both labor and capital to a martial state. In Shuster's view, a sound social order required two things: the rights of labor had to become a central concern of the state and such rights needed to be freely and creatively exercised. For Shuster, the chief practical prob lem with the Christian crusade for Franco was that by backing the cause of fascism it created international working-class antipathy to the Church, thus widening the gulf between Catholicism and the masses. George Shuster's response to America was his swan song with Commonweal. Michael Williams objected strongly to Shuster's views, as did the Catholic establishment in New York. Subscriptions to the Commonweal had fallen dramatically, and the fund drive currently underway to relieve the magazine's financial crisis could ill afford controversy. Shuster gave all these reasons for his decision to step down from the magazine's editorship, but those who were close to him claim he left because of a desire to dissociate himself from Williams's position on Spain.132 Father Talbot had the final word. Shuster's "further reflections" were certainly good news to editors and orators infected with Marxism, he wrote in the next issue of America. It was impossible for a Catholic to be neither left nor right on Spain. The only choice must be for a "White Spain," claimed Talbot, because unlike communism, the Catholic Church could indeed collaborate with fascism.133 Shuster's departure allowed Michael Williams to position Com monweal solidly in the pro-Franco camp. Not content with jour nalistic support for the Nationalists, Williams helped organize what
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was called the American Committee for Spanish Relief, of which he was secretary-general. In cooperation with the Ameri.can Asso ciation against Communism, whose president was Father Edward Lodge Curran, a man of extremist political views and a close ally of Reverend Charles Coughlin, Williams and his organization planned a mass rally at Madison Square Garden for purposes of rais ing money for victims of the Spanish war. From the outset plans for the rally swirled in controversy because many feared that the relief funds might be used solely to help the Insurgents.134 At the last minute the Committee announced that it would aid both sides. Michael Williams had become emotionally distraught by the Spanish situation, and the strain of the Madison Square rally took a toll on his health.135 The numbers who turned out for the event were disappointing, and the triumphalist, circus-like atmosphere of the affair was considerably embarrassing to more sober-minded Catholics. Williams, for example, composed a hymn for the occa sion to be sung by a choir "of a thousand voices." Mrs. S. Stanwood Menken donned a costume with peacock-like headdress studded with glittering stones to portray the "Spirit of Spain," prompting Heywood Braun's comment that the stunning lady was "pleased to proffer their radiance to the starving children of Bilbao who cry loud for bread."136 Although the rally was supposed to call attention to the suffering of all Spaniards on "a non-partisan and non-sectarian basis," practically all the speakers glorified the cause of the Insur gents and minimized the tragedy of Guernica. One of the featured guests, Father Rev. Dr. Bernard Grimley, editor of the Catholic Times of London, got straight to the point, thereby establishing the real purpose of the rally. The situation in Spain, he declared, could be clarified only by religion: "the issue is God or anti-God." With thundering applause from the audience he denounced the secular press for ignoring the murders of thousands of priests and other reli gious. "Are not these sufferings as worthy to be reported," asked Father Grimley, as the deaths of women and children "who seem always to get in the way of the bombs and shells of the other side?"137 Soon after the rally several prominent members of Common weal's board of directors, the Calvert Associates, the most influen tial being Carleton Hayes, arranged for Williams's retirement. In a
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private letter to Williams, Hayes pointed out his personal objec tions to associating Commonweal with the campaign for Franco but claimed that the Madison Square rally was "only one of a series of regrettable incidents" suggesting a need for change in the magazine's editorship.138 Williams had been strident and uncompromising in his cam paign for Franco, calling those who opposed his views a miscella neous set of radical fanatics, congenial ignoramuses, and badly educated riffraff. Such sentiments clashed sharply with the ideas of several on Commonweal 's editorial staff. These younger, more lib eral-minded individuals had been studying the Spanish situation in biweekly meetings with a number of lay faculty in the Department of Philosophy at Fordham University. Some of these meetings in cluded Jacques Maritain. Three members of this group-Harry Binesse, Philip Burnham, and Edward Skillin-had been proteges of Shuster and Maritain, with whom they had discussed their objec tions to Williams's policies. Having become so disturbed with Com monweal's stand on Spain, the men thought about issuing a manifesto of dissension. As opposed to the founding generation of Commonweal lead ers who represented the assimilated British and American interests of the Church, the young Binesse, Burnham, and Skillin were more in touch with the grass-roots Catholicism of the immigrant com munity; and wanting to broaden their religion's outreach, they felt that Catholics should be actively engaged in debating issues of political importance for the American nation as a whole. They were especially sensitive to the ravaging effects of economic depression and recognized that the social and political teachings of the Church must address such issues. American Catholic leaders in their view were largely ignoring the messages of the papal labor encyclicals. This lapse in social deaconry, compounded by an embarrassing ignorance of the myriad economic and political factors behind the Spanish Civil War, was serving to marginalize the Church among the laboring classes. After lengthy negotiations with the Calvert Associates, in which they received the important support of Carleton Hayes, Skillin and Burnham were able to put together the requisite financing to pur chase The Commonweal. The "new" Commonweal announced that it
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would fight totalitarianism in all its guises. But the magazine did not take up the Spanish issue until some two months after the trans fer of ownership. On 24 June 1938 the three young editors set out their position on the Spanish Civil War, and the response, in the words of one commentator, "brought the heavens down." Although the facts regarding Spain remained unclear given the thick haze of propaganda, there were a number of troubling matters, claimed the editors, that made it difficult if not impossible to single out either side for praise, let alone support. Loyalists had instigated or at least permitted violence against nuns, priests, and lay people. They pur sued their objectives with ruthlessness and showed a degree of alle giance to Soviet communism. The Insurgents, on the other hand, gave rhetorical support to the Church, yet, against the protests of the Holy Father, indiscriminately murdered innocent civilians through aerial bombing and were intimately associated with totali tarian dictators of the Right. The new editors of Commonweal were mainly concerned, how ever, with the impact of the Spanish conflict on America. The bitter divisions it had created within the Catholic community made it difficult for the Church to address the social and political problems created by the Great Depression. What could America learn from Spain in its efforts to create a more just society? One path was that already taken by the Spanish themselves, one which involved un compromising partisanship. This, it seems, was an approach assumed by most American Catholic organs of opinion. An alternative was to avoid the passion that both blinds and simplifies and seek instead what the editors called "a positive impartiality'' in search of what is right, good, and just. Embracing wholeheartedly one side or the other would mean accepting the bad, not only because the facts were obscure but also because both sides advocated ideas that ran against American political tradition. The Spanish situation offered a false choice, since both fascism and communism were anti-Christian and secularist. Commonweal urged its readers to maintain "positive im partiality'' and "sanity ofjudgement" on Spain, and warned against being uncritical partisans of either side.139 The young editors of Commonweal had been strongly influenced by the ideas of Jacques Maritain and Emmanuel Mounier. They concluded that the real choice for Catholics lay between the Hegelian
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secular state in its current Marxist and fascist variants and the "per sonalist" state, which exists for the protection of its citizens, allow ing each the free pursuit of mental, social, and spiritual life without the dictation of an exterior force. There was a powerful negative reaction to the new Common weal's stand. Archbishop John T. McNicholas of Cincinnati banned the sale of the magazine in his diocese. Almost all of the major American Catholic publications strongly opposed "positive impar tiality," and the fact that the liberal Christian Century, Reinhold Niebuhr, and the Nation, among others, welcomed the approach only created more problems. America found the controversy con clusive proof that failure to embrace the Nationalists only served to give comfort to "Loyalists, Leftists, and Liberals," since Franco and everything he stood for was "a positive good."140 The Sign coun terattacked Commonweal's position by criticizing "Liberal Catho lics" (they "pooh-pooh the dangers of Communism in spite of Popes, bishops and priests") in its June 1938 issue; Ave Maria, the voice of the Holy Cross fathers at the University of Notre Dame, saw the hand of Maritain in Commonweal 's policy and attacked the French philosopher and Commonweal for their "dangerous" liberal proclivities. The Sign's Owen B. McGuire held a position typical of most of the American Catholic establishment on "positive impartiality." Commonweal claimed that outsiders simply did not have enough "facts" to judge the Spanish situation. McGuire, on the other hand, claimed that there were at least twelve "absolutely certain" facts regarding the Spanish conflict, including the fact that it was a planned revolution directed by Moscow to set up "an Atheistic Communist Union of Soviets in 'the whole Peninsula." Any good Catholic, McGuire argued, had no need to know anything else about the situ ation: "It should be sufficient for him to read the joint letter of the Spanish Bishops."141 Since the bishops had spoken, Catholics were expected to rally to their side. Those who questioned were traitors to the faith. Edward Skillin received the most violent hate mail of his life, most of which appears to have come from Coughlinites and the pro fascist constituency of Patrick Scanlan's Brooklyn Tablet. Within the year Commonweal lost nearly a quarter of its subscribers.142
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Only two members of the American Catholic hierarchy sup ported Commonweal's position, namely, George Cardinal Munde lein of Chicago ("positive impartiality" was welcomed in his paper, The New World) and Archbishop Edmund V. O'Hara of Kansas City, who privately praised the magazine.143 Dorothy Day's Catho lic Worker enthusiastically endorsed neutrality, as did Virgil Michel, editor of Orate Fratres. Day's followers, the Commonweal circle, and Virgil Michel had long been allies in the struggle for liturgical renewal, which they saw as a means of energizing Catholics for social action. Prior to Skillin's and Burnham's stand on the Spanish Civil War, Virgil Michel had created a stir in the pages of Commonweal by at tacking an article in the Catholic World which had depicted Christ as "the first preacher of capitalism." This was blasphemy, claimed Michel, for capitalism had sacrificed the social ends of economic en deavor for material gain. He urged Christians to be on their guard and not allow "iniquitous capitalism to lead to its logical conclusion in either communistic collectivism or the equally totalitarian fascism."144 Virgil Michel wrote a personal letter to Edward Skillin for pub lication in which he supported Commonweal's neutrality. A true Christian social order, Michel emphasized, did not entail setting up a theocracy; the Church should never be identified with the fortunes of any particular political arrangement. 145 In explaining his own position on the Spanish situation, Michel drew on the advice of the well-known poet and journalist Jose Bergamin, editor of the Span ish Catholic review Cruz y Raya. Bergamin had been permitted to travel through Insurgent territory under Franco's auspices. He was not convinced of the righteousness of the Loyalist cause, however, and urged his fellow Catholics to remain neutral on the civil war. Virgil Michel believed the situation too complex to be understood at a distance. The struggle, he insisted, was not simply between de mocracy versus autocracy, or religion versus atheism, but was rather rooted in Spain's complex cultural and historical experiences.146 The Catholic Worker had voiced its opposition to the Spanish Civil War long before Commonweal did so and was the first Ameri can publication to recommend the policy of neutrality. In Septem ber 1936, soon after the fighting erupted, the paper argued that the issues were not sufficiently clear to be judged fairly and that there
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certainly was much right and much wrong on both sides. "Forget your anger," urged the editors. "Let your indignation die. Remem ber only that the Body is being rent asunder, and the only solution is Love."147 In December 1936 the Catholic Worker published the full text of a long letter written to Emmanuel Mounier's Esprit by the Span ish writer and educator Alfredo Mendizabal.148 The author had ex perienced firsthand the partisan hatred unleashed by the war, which, he observed, was threatening to submerge all that was human in man. The only sensible Christian response to such brutal stupidities was non-partisanship: To take sides under these circumstances would be for me to renounce in some manner this independence which is the mark of the Christian in his power over the world. It would also per mit me to be led by people who have unpardonably lost their reason in the ocean of their passions.149 No one anathematized the combatants more forcibly than Men dizabal. Catholics in Spain had compromised their Church by bind ing it to a reactionary political cause, and in revenge furious hordes pillaged, burned, and killed all that in their eyes represented reli gion. But Mendizabal was especially scandalized by the vulgar and murderous uses being made of religion by the Insurgents to justify a criminal action, namely, fomenting a civil war, the most wholly immoral of means to achieve a political objective. Although both sides aligned themselves with anti-God philosophies, the sins of the Right, claimed Mendizabal, were worse: . . . justice compels us to a severity in judgment, all the greater if we perceive a like hatred among those who claim for them selves the name of Catholics. For we owe to the Truth of Christ, to the Love that Christ had for all men, the homage of the con quest of souls, not the insult of the massacre of bodies in a hatred which prevents the conversion of souls.150 The Catholic Worker also raised warnings about the fascist con nection in the Spanish Civil War. Father H. A. Reinhold had
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become the paper's Hamburg correspondent in 1934 and passed on important information to Day's group about Nazi campaigns against German Catholic and Protestant churches as well as the Jewish reli gion. In the summer of 1935 the Catholic Worker began publishing a series of articles on the dangers of fascism, and a number of Day's inner circle (Norman Mckenna, Dorothy Weston, A. H. Codding ton, and William Callahan) as well as Day herself picketed the German consulate, inciting demonstrations against Nazi persecu tion of Catholics and Jews.151 Several of the articles on fascism pro vided detailed information about the Nazi oppression of religion in Germany and warned that the same could be expected from a fas cist victory in Spain. 152 The Catholic Worker group's street activities frequently brought criticism from various Catholic quarters, but this was trifling com pared to the protest sparked by the letter from Esprit. Many read ers withdrew their support from the paper, claiming its position on Spain was playing directly into the hands of the communists. Yet the Catholic Worker was also attacked by readers on the left, who regarded neutrality abetting fascism.153 As a result of the Catholic Worker's stand on the Spanish Civil War, circulation dropped from a high of 175,000 a month to a low of 100,000, as both readers on the left and right canceled their subscriptions.154 Commonweal under the editorial triumvirate of Binesse, Skillin, and Burnham, along with Dorothy Day's Catholic Worker move ment, represented a politically progressive, social-activist Catholi cism linking together the British and American liturgical revival with the Maritain circle in France. The so-called "Commonweal Catholics"-an initially derogatory term suggesting disloyalty to the religious establishment's party line-for whom the new editors spoke were unyielding in their commitment to social reform in the spirit of the papal labor encyclicals. They championed a liberal political agenda, essentially a pluralistic form of "Christian Democ racy" consistent with the thinking of Luigi Sturzo, Emmanuel Mo unier, and Jacques Maritain.155 The Commonweal's relationship with Maritain was crucial in this endeavor and was solidified in their common struggle against the holy war in Spain. In the face of withering attacks from right-wing Catholics in Eu rope and America, Maritain and his associates on the Committee for
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Civil and Religious Peace in Spain steadfastly continued their en dorsement of Commonweal's "positive impartiality." As they saw it, this was the only prudent approach for Catholics regarding the struggle in Spain.156 Maritain himself was encouraged by developments in Ameri can Catholicism during these difficult years. In particular, he was pleased with its efforts to assimilate religious beliefs with the demo cratic, pluralistic traditions of American political practice. In this regard he singled out for praise the philosophers at Fordham Uni versity, the liturgical work of Virgil Michel, and the social deaconry of Dorothy Day, as well as the work of a diverse group of Ameri can non-Catholics, who, in the language of Father Gerald Vann, were practicing a policy of "integration," that is, attempting to merge spiritual life with the cultural, social, and political affairs of the nation.157 These efforts and activities resonated with Maritain's hopes for a revived Christian culture that could provide the necessary social healing after the traumas wrought by communism and the varieties of fascism. Maritain's allies in the fight to bring a reflective and bal anced approach to the conflict in Spain shared with him a deep commitment to the democratic and pluralistic principles of the West ern tradition, a set of principles which, as the pioneering encyclicals of Pope Leo XIII had shown, were consistent with the historically evolving teachings of the Church. Maritain's own political philoso phy had been inspired by the Leonine encyclicals. It envisioned a pluralistic body politic bringing together in organic unity a diver sity of social groupings and structures each claiming the right to exercise basic freedoms independent of the larger, superimposing political organizations so characteristic of both communist collec tivism and fascism. Citing Quadragesimo Anno, which spoke of the injustice of higher political institutions arrogating to themselves functions performed more efficiently by smaller bodies, Maritain insisted that a "new Christendom" (his term for a future temporal regime whose structures in varying degrees reflect the imprint of a Christian conception of life) would allow maximum autonomy for individual persons and the social groups that give direction and meaning to their lives.158 The groundwork for this new Christian
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order was to be found not in Nationalist Spain, whose political and social models were authoritarian and paternalistic, and certainly not in the integral Catholicism that saturated the thinking of reac tionary Catholics of the Vogelsang school, but in the democratic and liberal institutions that had evolved in Britain, France, and the United States.
C HAPTE R 14
Completing the Circle I think it is wrong to look upon the Catholic religion as by its very nature hostile to democracy. Ofall the various interpretations of Christianity, Catholicism strikes me as byfar the one most favourable to the equality of{social andpolitical} conditions. In Catholicism, the religious community is made up oftwo elements only:priest andpeople. Only thepriest is raised above the rest ofthefaith.fol: all below him are equal. In Catholicism, sofar as dogma is concerned, men ofevery degree of intelligence areplaced on the same level The wise man and the ignoramus, the man ofgenius and the man in the street, all are subject to the same creed in all its details. . . . It strikes no bargain with any child ofearth, and, weighing each man by the same standard, it brings every class ofsociety without distinction to thefoot ofthe same altar, just as such distinctions are confounded in the sight of God. -Alexis de Tocqueville 1
T
he conditions that led to the Spanish Civil War of 1936, framed as they were by a retrograde social and political cli mate untouched by the Reformation and Enlightenment experiences that had altered the culture of the rest of Western Europe, were markedly similar to those that produced the French Revolution. The men who started the Civil War certainly believed this to be the case: the officers of the Movimiento Nacional justified their declaration ofwar on the grounds of preventing a French-style revolution from destroying traditional Spain. 2 The excesses of the French and industrial revolutions, followed by what the historian Carleton ]. H. Hayes has called the "Genera tion of Materialism," had been anticipated by the pioneering Catho lic social thinkers, including Ketteler, Ozanam, and others. Their critique of modern society and programs for reform, a middle road
Completing the Circle 379
between capitalism and socialist collectivism, informed the great labor encyclical Rerum Novarum. Although this document's imme diate objective was somewhat limited (establishing the right of workers to organize into mutual benefit societies), it reposed on a set of moral principles that allowed for a continued expansion of social doctrine into other spheres of life that enabled Catholics to keep their faith relevant in a world of constant political and eco nomic change.3 Leo XIII's approach to social problems was pur posely broad and intended to remain outside party rivalries and changing political fashions (partly as the result of a plurality of voices giving advice to the papacy) . The intellectual architecture of Rerum Novarum, however, strengthened the conviction that Catho lics must take the initiative for promoting economic and political reforms by working through the various agencies of secular society. Rerum Novarum provided a trenchant critique of industrial soci ety and set out the general principles for constructing a Christian social order, but there was no consensus within Catholic intellectual circles concerning the practical methods for doing so. Fundamen tally, Catholic political thought and action during the nineteenth century were largely riven by two opposing approaches to moder nity: the Christian democracy of Ozanam and Ketteler and the reac tionary politics of the integralist tradition associated with Vogelsang, de Maistre, and others. 4 The former was progressive and prepared to find common ground with modern pluralistic political practices. The integralists, on the other hand, rued the loss of medieval cul ture, admired authoritarian political forms, and essentially rejected modern culture.5 For example, the influential American historian Ross J. S. Hoffman, one of Hilaire Belloc's admirers, took seriously the possibility of retrieving the cultural verities lost in modern soci ety by returning to the ethos of the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, a historical era that for him represented a "fresh world" of "vigor . . . health . . . passion, heroism and hard thinking."6 The political con sequences of Hoffman's religious thought found little resonance in American culture, and his advocacy of a Bellocian "monarchical" concept of state brought him uncomfortably close to fascism. The Catholic mind, wrote Hoffman, never took easily to the liberal sys tem of parliamentary oligarchies, behind which the real powers of
3 80 CATHOLIC I N T ELLECTUALS AND T H E CHALLENGE O F D E M O C RACY
government lay hidden. Thus Catholics, he pointed out, "can look with considerable favor . . . upon the Fascist State in Italy because Mussolini's state does appear to be solicitous equally for the well being of all classes . . . . "7 The extreme Romantic Austrian Catholic writer Anton Orel, regarded as Karl von Vogelsang's successor, also sounded very much like Hilaire Belloc when it came to liberal poli tics. Democracy, he wrote, was nothing more than the governance of a moneyed oligarchy greased by unscrupulous demagogues. The cancer of such politics must be excised: We desperately need an authority whose ultimate source of power is God. All the democratic instruments like universal suffrage have turned out to be frauds . . . . There is not a trace of true democracy anywhere, instead we have been saddled with an oligarchy of demagogues in cahoots with the plutocracy.8 In many respects the careers of Hilaire Belloc and H. A. Rein hold symbolize these two divergent political tendencies as they were played out in British and American Catholicism. Belloc and his epi gones were highly critical of Western parliamentary democracy, and a good number championed Mussolini-style authoritarianism as a solution to the ills of the interwar years. Douglas Woodruff, for in stance, could write as late as 1938 that the Church "plainly" has "sym pathy and good will" for Fascism. For Woodruff there simply was no choice for Catholics between democracy and the virtues ofFascism.9 Woodruff's views were outside the liberal/progressive Catholic stream discussed in this study, one that had adjusted successfully to the meaning of the French Revolution and sought accommodation with a secular world order. Yet these liberal Catholics-Reinhold and many others discussed here-were a distinct, almost overlooked minority by the 1930s, and it took an individual of strong, inde pendent constitution to withstand the force of conservative Catho lic political opinion. There was a striking lack of support in the public forum for the few voices of progressive Catholic ideas. One notes, for instance, a conspicuous absence of strong democratic con viction in the vast majority of British and American Catholic organs of opinion during these years. Even the highly influential English
Completing the Circle 3 81
Catholic historian, Christopher Dawson (whose political views would later earn him the editorship of the Dublin Review), reflected this tendency when he asserted that liberal individualism, which found its political expression in parliamentary democracy, was entirely inconsistent with Catholic principles. There certainly was no nec essary connection between Christianity on the one hand and liberal democratic forms of government on the other, claimed Dawson. Thus there was little reason why the passing of democratic forms of government should be opposed by Catholic sentiment: "It is at least theoretically possible that the limitation of political and economic freedom by the extension of social control should be actually favor able to the cause of spiritual freedom."10 Indeed, Dawson went so far as to say that liberalism with its various democratic political forms was the most dangerous enemy and rival that the Catholic Church had to meet in modern times.11 Dawson at this juncture was con vinced that the social ideals articulated in Rerum Novarum and QuadragesimoAnno were more in line with Fascism than with either liberalism or socialism. Hilaire Belloc and H. A. Reinhold, symbols of two conflicting Catholic paths to modernity, paid a high price for the courage of their convictions. Although Belloc was far better known than Father Reinhold, indeed he was perhaps the most prominent Catholic figure of the age, his career as an academic was painfully compro mised by a contentious personality and religious triumphalism.12 A giant as a man of letters in Edwardian England, Belloc's politi cally extremist views make him an intellectual pariah today. His reactionary and anti-Semitic opinions are a source of considerable discomfort to contemporary Catholics. Belloc, for many such Catho lics, is someone to be hidden away in the family closet and not talked about. This is an unfortunate and distorting legacy, since, as this study has labored to point out, it has tended to obscure the consid erable influence (not altogether negative) and significance of the man for the era in which he lived. No single individual was more responsible for breaking down the siege mentality of English Catho lics than Hilaire Belloc, and his perspicacious social and political ideas were fertile soil for the growth of new and imaginative ap proaches to the problems of industrial society.
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H. A. Reinhold became well known in American and European liturgical circles, but he never achieved the high public profile and international influence of Hilaire Belloc. His selfless struggle for social justice in the tradition of liberal, progressive Catholicism led to exile and persecution. The pain and loneliness brought by sepa ration from family and country, along with the persistent attacks from right-wing Catholics, took a heavy toll. As he wrote Father William Cushing, To be a refugee is in itself a curse. No one who has not been in this terrible position will ever understand what it means to be an outsider and a suspected man all life long. Ifl had known this before, I might have preferred to face the concentration camp and the hardships of one of the famous staged trials for high treason in Germany.13 The fact that the reactionary, integralist tradition has been allowed to define the Catholic response to the political and social challenges of the modern age is a distortion of the historical record. This is partly the consequence of the behavior of the Church hier archy in Germany, Italy, and Spain, as well as the weighty influence of many British and American conservative Catholics who were inclined toward authoritarian ways.14 Consider again the opinion of Christopher Dawson (who in some ways seems to have inherited the exalted position once claimed by Hilaire Belloc) that the Church is naturally more comfortable with fascist forms of governance than with democratic parliamentary ones.15 In their attempt to overcome the "mechanical element as represented by the party machine," the fascists cultivated a direct relation of personal loyalty between leader and the man in the street. Their success, wrote Dawson, owed much to the fact that they resembled religious orders rather than the political party of the old type. Fascist movements, he claimed, "were organized in an hierarchical fashion, based on authority, discipline and subordination." As such, they tended to foster the same strong esprit de corps as Catholic religious orders.16 Dawson's assessment of the natural cultural affinity between Catholicism and authoritarianism was vigorously rejected at the time by such liberal Catholics as Don Luigi Sturzo and the historian
Completing the Circle 3 83
D. A. Binchy.17 Sturzo argued that the political forms that best met Catholic values were not fixed but shifted with historical circum stances. Monarchy, so highly esteemed by Belloc, Ross Hoffman, Charles Petrie, and others, may well have fit the needs of a pre modern culture that reached integration through a communitarian ethos-the accent here being placed on rights of single communi ties represented by the head: Cuius regio illius et religio. But democ racy satisfies a society that has become pluralistic. In the twentieth century, asserted Sturzo, democratic political forms best comple mented the Civilta Cattolica's (1864) definition of the ethical and religious principles of Christianity.18 Nevertheless, many historians have accepted Dawson's assess ment, regarding the Catholic Church's collaboration with dictators, as well as its failure to provide progressive leadership for social change, as an inevitable consequence of antidemocratic institutional bias.19 For example, the successful campaign to purge communism from the American labor movement led by Fathers Francis X. Talbot, S.]., Owen Rice of the American Catholic Trade Union, and others an obsessive struggle that forced Catholic social teachings to the sidelines and ultimately weakened trade unionism in America has convinced the labor historian Douglas Seaton that Catholicism itself is inherently incapable of supporting progressive or radical labor programs. 20 However, a broader analysis of the issue suggests that Seaton's judgment is too historically confined. The important role played by Hilaire Belloc and the Chesterton brothers during the era of labor unrest in pre-World War I Britain shows very clearly that Catholic social thought could be employed to support not only progressive but outright revolutionary labor objectives. One must also appreciate the aggressive role played by the American labor-priests in helping workers organize against the large monop olies in the coal, steel, and oil industries in the decades before World War I. One of the most colorful and influential was Father Peter C. Yorke of San Francisco. Father Yorke used Rerum Novarum as his labor bible, and as a charismatic educator, orator, and trade union organizer he established a legacy of progressive Catholicism in the tradition of the social gospels. When he died in 1925 a labor news paper eulogized him as the "Father of the organized labor move ment of San Francisco."21 One historian recently has equated Father
3 8 4 CATHOLIC I N T ELLECTUALS AND T H E CHALLENGE O F D E M O C RACY
Yorke's role in the history of American labor with Martin Luther King Jr.'s leadership of the civil rights movement.22 Several contemporary students of Catholic social teaching have identified important connections between the Church's traditional grass-roots commitment to supporting the poor in their struggle against economic injustice and various radical streams of socioeco nomic theory. Radical theory is generally understood as having its roots in Marx's classical critique of capitalism. It recognizes the inter locking structural relationships of political, social, and economic institutions and emphasizes human labor as the source of all value.23 There is a certain symmetry between radical theory and Catholic social and economic thinking, especially as manifested in Distrib utism. Both recognized the interconnectiveness of economics with all aspects of social behavior. Catholic economic philosophy from Ozanam to Chesterton and Belloc accepted the labor theory of value, and their ultimate vision of social justice-as is the case with radical notions of democratic socialism-required the empower ment of marginalized people; popular control of the productive and political processes (thus a rejection of corporate capitalism, since this meant sharing power between management and labor); decentrali zation of economic structures; and the creation of a new ethos of social solidarity. 24 The Catholic Church's relationship with right-wing dictators in the 1930s has raised a number of troubling questions concerning its commitment to traditional Christian principles of equality, justice, and the social gospels. Guenter Lewy's ground-breaking study of the Church and Nazism emphasized, among other things, the Ger man hierarchy's limited understanding of Hitler's revolution.25 How ever, the German bishops' continued failure to penetrate the Nazi myth, Lewy insisted, suggests something deeper and more politi cally disturbing: a lack of concern over the abrogation of civil rights except as they impacted on the special freedoms of the Church.26 The Brown Shirts tortured and murdered, but the bishops, moti vated by short-sighted and parochial humanitarian interests mixed with institutional pragmatism, saw no reason to denounce such behavior as contrary to Catholic teachings. In addition, there was a certain attraction for aspects of Nazi ideology (in particular, its appeal to tradition and resistance to the "red tide" of communism),
Completing the Circle 3 85
claimed Lewy, that prevented the episcopate from understanding "the true inhumanity of Nazism."27 In the final analysis, Lewy has argued, the German hierarchy's limited opposition to Hitler was calibrated to meet institutional interests rather than any higher stan dards ofliberty and justice. 28 For well over a hundred years the main enemy of the Church was communism, and almost any social and political principle could be sacrificed to meet this challenge, even its own moral teachings.29 Lewy's analysis stands in sharp contrast to the views of con servative Catholics. The highly influential Bishop John F. Noll of Fort Wayne, Indiana, editor of America's largest circulation Catho lic paper, Our Sunday Visitor (reaching more than five hundred thou sand homes, making it the widest circulating Catholic weekly in the world), praised the German bishops for their courageous opposition to Hitler. In Germany itself no one denounced National Socialism so fre quently and in such a nation-wide manner as did the Bishops of Germany who, as often as three or four times a year met jointly to issue Pastorals to be read from the pulpits of the Catholic Churches, or to be distributed clandestinely among the Catho lic people. 30 Yet Bishop Noll's own assessment of fascism seems to corrob orate Lewy's thesis. Noll, for instance, appreciated certain aspects of Hitler's mission, in particular his anti-Bolshevism. In 1938 Noll went so far as to write to Adolf Hitler explaining how he, as bishop and editor of a high-profile Catholic paper, felt "compelled to defend Nazism from communist attacks, as well as from attacks in the secu lar press of this country." Bishop Noll invited Hitler to write an ar ticle for Our Sunday Visitor, as one who could speak officially for the Nazi program: "The article might contain about 2000 words, and should declare the philosophy of Nazism, its main objectives and its need in your particular country." Following the article's publication in Our Sunday Visitor, Noll wrote, he would like permission to use it in a book, which would have wide circulation.31 Noll also tried to set up a symposium on problems of current economic and social jus tice; Mussolini and Hitler, along with Catholic spokesmen for liberal
3 86 CATHOLIC I NTE LLECTUALS AND T H E CHALLENGE O F D E M O C RACY
causes (including Fathers John A. Ryan, R. A. McGowan, and Peter Dietz), would be invited to attend. Father Ryan, much to his good sense, thought the proposal completely inappropriate and refused to participate. Many influential Catholic leaders passionately defended au thoritarian forms of governance. The Vatican's official response to modern democratic governance was dilatory and was not clarified until Pope John XXIII's 1963 encyclical Pacem in Terris. Yet the ar guments it made for the acceptance of constitutional democracy had already been set down by the liberal Catholics of the Sturzo Maritain persuasion.32 All this suggests that the Church as an insti tution guided by the requisites of bureaucratic self-preservation is not as flexible philosophically in responding to social change as are individual Catholics. (Nor, it should be added, has the Vatican always shown wisdom and a sense of Christian justice in its behavior and pronouncements.) All too often institutional imperatives have encouraged the Vatican to follow rather than lead the faithful within a modern secular society. 33 There are of course good historical reasons for the authoritar ian ethos of the papacy. Authority in the Church generally has fol lowed secular political patterns. Yet, since the Church is of necessity inherently a conservative institution, keeping alive unique events that occurred over two thousand years ago, a time lag has developed between secular affairs and institutional vision. As the theologian Robert Nowell has observed, in the Church "attitudes towards authority which the secular world has long since outgrown are apt to be found fossilised within it like flies in amber." Nowell argued that the Reformation and the defensive and conservative reaction to it by the Church enormously increased this time lag, and it was only with the Second Vatican Council that Rome started to emerge from the age of absolutism, which in the secular world began to decay with the American and French revolutions.34 One is compelled to ask what it was that made so many leading British and American Catholics political reactionaries and apologists for fascist-type regimes, while only a minority drew on Catholic social teachings to justify an accommodation with liberal politics. Why did the Catholic Church in general show greater leniency toward the Right? Part of the answer is that many Catholics were intuitively
Completing the Circle 3 8 7
uncomfortable with democracy, temperamentally more at home with the certitudes of hierarchy and authority, and generally willing to follow the directions of their conservative clerical leaders. This was certainly the case with Hilaire Belloc and his circle. Although he voiced a philosophical beliefin democracy, Belloc never thought it could function properly because the unsophisticated masses were susceptible to manipulation by corrupt politicians. One of Belloc's critics, the English liturgical reformer Father S. J. Gosling, called attention to this disposition when he claimed that Belloc began by :fighting for the underdog, but when the underdog turned to other leaders Belloc bit him.35 The parliamentary system in England, Bel loc had argued, owed its past success to the aristocratic character of the nation's social and political tradition. But with the rise of the "money cliques" the nobleman lost his influence. As Christopher Dawson noted, democratic institutions when left to themselves were apt to become tools of sordid and selfish interests.36 Belloc gravi tated to Action Franfaise because he idealized the medieval func tion of aristocratic leadership and monarchical political forms. G. K. Chesterton, on the other hand, exhibited opposite tendencies, namely, a suspicion of privilege and an abiding respect for the com mon man.37 It also has been noted that a good number of British and Ameri can Catholic apologists for fascism were converts from Protes tantism. Many of these converts commented on the influence of Chesterton and Belloc concerning their decisions, and the militant Latino-centric views of the latter might account for their appreci ation of Mussolini and Franco. As the Catholic historian D. A. Binchy observed, the converts tended to identify the Italian nation as the citadel of Catholicism, its spiritual fatherland, whereas cra dle Catholics were more apt to separate the Italian government from the Vatican, possessing an "instinctive, or perhaps inherited, grasp of the realities of the Church's relation to Italy."38 The prominence of the convert Catholic men ofletters, along with their close work ing relationships with respectable journals of intellectual opinion, conveyed the mistaken impression that their views were official.39 The dichotomy between liberal and conservative Catholics was strikingly evident in an ongoing private debate between Father S . ]. Gosling and Douglas Woodruff. Gosling was one of the most vocal
3 88 CATHOLIC I N T ELLECTUALS AND T H E CHALLENGE OF D E M O C RACY
critics of Belloc's identification of Catholicism with European cul ture. He particularly objected to Belloc's support of Latin fascist dic tators simply because they claimed to be Catholic.40 Gosling had the opportunity to vent his views on the subj ect over a period of time with Woodruff, who, in Gosling's mind, had absorbed most of Belloc's religious and political ideas.41 Gosling complained that Woodruff and his influential friends in the Catholic hierarchy were curiously silent about "wage slavery," seldom if ever making refer ence to the major purpose of the papal social encyclicals.42 Wood ruff, in response, claimed to have a more extensive knowledge of the encyclicals than his interlocutor. Gosling admitted that it might be so, but there was a danger of not being able to see the wood for the trees. The object of two great social encyclicals was to raise the material condition of the working classes, and Woodruff and friends said very little about this.43 Such squabbling over social encyclicals, however, was only a symptom of the main problem, for what fundamentally divided Gosling and Woodruff were questions concerning freedom and authority. Like Belloc, Woodruff had a deep affection for the insti tution of medieval monarchy and thought the world considerably less civilized since its demise, a death he attributed in part to the rise of liberalism and participatory politics. This process, in his mind, was abetted by "the Court Chaplains of Demos"44 who curried favor with the mob. The crux of the whole business between us, wrote Gosling to Woodruff, is that "you would convert the world from the top downwards. I would begin with the bottom upwards. The first looks speedier, easier, and more attractive. The second is surer and more lasting."45 A suspicion of popular political participation, based on a fundamental bias in favor of authoritarian leadership buttressed by religion, marked the thinking of all Catholics of the Right. 46 This also explains why the social reforms of the British and American liturgists found no support among such Catholics. The liturgical reformers urged the Church to reach out and involve the faithful more directly in the liturgy of the Mass. Conservatives thought the granting of such freedom a dangerous tendency. 47 This antidemo cratic bias certainly conditioned the Catholic Right's approach to the Spanish Civil War. Franco deserved support chiefly because he
Completing the Circle 3 8 9
claimed to save a traditional, clerico-authoritarian order from the consequences of liberalism. A wide gulf naturally separated Gosling and Woodruff regard ing international affairs. Bellocian Latino-centric Catholicism and Woodruff's own distaste for democracy conditioned the Tablet's sup port of Mussolini, Franco, and Portugal's Salazar. But Gosling noted a double standard here. Woodruff and Belloc had frequently con demned the corruption of British politics but complacently accepted the turpitude of the Latin dictators: "Demos, as you have reminded me, has his court chaplains; but there is no sting in that remark so long as you do not hold that all court chaplains are suspect."48 Why was Woodruff always pointing out the evils of commu nism, asked Father Gosling, which was only dangerous when totali tarian in practice? Totalitarianism in any form-including the fascist variety-was fundamentally opposed to Catholic philosophy. But for Woodruff a Catholic Fascist bishop was allowed to steal a horse, whereas the Protestant Socialist bishop may not look over the hedge. This equation, wrote Gosling, needed balancing somewhere. 49 What troubled Father Gosling had not gone unnoticed by one of the age's great moral voices, the writer George Orwell. Few have analyzed more incisively the modern authoritarian mind than George Orwell. It is noteworthy that he detected a philosophical linkage between reactionary Catholicism and the totalitarian twins of Marxism-Fascism. All three, he claimed, contradicted the moral values of the Western intellectual tradition. A close reading of Orwell's critique of right-wing Catholicism reveals a remarkable affinity with the political positions articulated by H. A. Reinhold, Jacques Maritain, Don Luigi Sturzo, and other liberal Catholics represented in this study. Orwell was a special breed of socialist whose self-declared mis sion was to battle dogma, especially the communist, fascist, and Catholic varieties.50 Orwell went straight to the moral failing that so weakened the cause of the Catholic Latinophiles. As Orwell made clear in an article for the Partisan Review, one of his major tasks was to fight the intellectual tendencies of three literary cliques: the "Stali nist gang, the Fascist gang, and the Catholic gang."51 All three had in common a reliance on a religious priesthood separated from the
39 0 CATHOLIC I N T ELLECTUALS AND T H E CHALLENGE OF D E M O C RACY
ordinary citizen and an adherence to dogma. All three distrusted and limited the individual's ability to judge matters independently. Any writer embracing these orthodoxies did so by suppressing his sensibilities and intellectual integrity. The "orthodoxy-sniffers," as Orwell labeled those intellectuals who sold their careers to the cause of a particular dogma, were guilty of what he called "the drunkenness of nationalism." This was dif ferent from the passion of patriotism, by which he meant devotion to a particular place and way of life without the jingoistic desire to force it upon other people. Nationalism, on the other hand, was by nature aggressive and exclusive. It was generally a blind and irra tional attachment to a country, but it also had the quality of being "transferred" to a system of beliefs. The "nationalist" placed the object of his attachment above everything else, beyond good and evil, recognizing no other duty than to advance its interests. A popu lar form of such sentiment among intellectuals of the 1930s was that of communism: "a Communist, for my purpose here," explained Orwell, "is one who looks upon the US SR as his Fatherland and feels it his duty to justify Russian policy and advance Russian inter ests at all costs."52 Orwell also identified other contending forms of "nationalism," and although they were opposing currents of thought, they were bound together by a common principle. For him, the variety most closely corresponding to communism was political Catholicism. By this Orwell meant the kind of militant Catholicism exhibited in the Tablet and through the writings of Douglas Jerrold, Arnold Lunn, and others in Belloc's circle. Unfortunately, he identified Chester ton rather than Belloc as its main source and most notable expo nent. Not seeing the complete Chesterton, Orwell could say: "Every book that he wrote, every paragraph, every sentence, every incident in every story, every scrap of dialogue, had to demonstrate beyond possibility of mistake the superiority of the Catholic over the Protes tant or the pagan."53 This superiority was not simply spiritual or intellectual but was translated into national culture entailing what Orwell called an "ignorant idealisation of the Latin countries," par ticularly France and Italy. Orwell never forgave Chesterton for his failure to denounce Mussolini's imperialism with the same vitriol
Completing the Circle 391
that he had applied to British expansionism. Orwell praised Ches terton for being a "patriot" in affairs concerning Britain, and he greatly admired Chesterton's "Little Englander" politics. But when he turned to international affairs, said Orwell, orthodoxy induced Chesterton to forsake his principles without being aware of it. A major characteristic of "transferred nationalism'' was an indifference to reality, an inability to see congruity between a similar set of facts. Chesterton, chided Orwell, had little to say against imperialism and the conquest of colored races when it was practiced by Italians and Frenchmen. "His hold on reality, his literary taste, and even to some extent his moral sense, were dislocated as soon as his nationalistic loyalties were involved."54 As pointed out earlier in this study, Chesterton did not succumb to the Latinophile vision of Hilaire Belloc. He ultimately condemned fascism because it lacked a fixed moral principle and was totalitarian. The irony that eluded Orwell was that Chesterton had criticized fascism precisely because it was not democratic: fascist government, with its insistence on the un questioned sovereignty of the state, could never be accepted by Catholics because it ultimately denied the dignity and liberty of the common man.55 On the other hand, Orwell's objections to Chesterton were bril liantly accurate when applied to Hilaire Belloc. Unlike his friend, Belloc had indeed gone over to orthodoxy in precisely the fashion that so irritated Orwell. Orwell was an intellectual who understood the necessity of staying out of the marketplace of advocacy politics. Orwell could never sell his services to a party, as did Belloc, because it meant giving up one's freedom to an ideology. Becoming part of a party also meant committing oneself to the propagation of doc trine: "the mere sound of words ending in-ism," wrote Orwell, "seems to bring with it the smell of propaganda."56 In this respect Orwell was in step with Jacques Maritain (whose Catholicism was a creed that transcended nationalism). Both played the role of the so-called ''Julien Benda intellectual."57 This is a writer who takes on the responsibility of being a truth-telling moralizer, an intellectual who strives to remain above the passions of politics and refuses to descend into the agora where he is obliged to compromise the ideal of abstract justice for a partisan cause.58 For Orwell, this did not
39 2 CATHOLIC I NTELLECTUALS AND T H E CHALLENGE OF D E M O C RACY
mean that the intellectual had to avoid the political fray. It meant only that when he did soil his hands in the mud of advocacy (dis tributing leaflets, lecturing in dingy halls, even fighting in civil wars), he should do so as a citizen, as a human being, but not as a writer. "But whatever else he does in the service of his party, he should never write for it. He should make clear that his writing is a thing apart," something that must be done as an individual, an outsider, an unwelcome guerrilla on the flank of an army.59 Belloc and his circle, from Orwell's perspective, were too much the "true believers," too much the insiders in their commitment to the ortho doxy of Rome. Orwell's analysis of the sins of the Catholic Right applied equally to his colleagues on the Left who became partisan commu nists. In Orwell's view, the writers of the l93os-Stephen Spender, W. H. Auden, Edward Upward, and others-had moved away from the despairing "twilight of the gods" mind-set of their 1920s prede cessors into a Boy Scout atmosphere of "bareknees and community singing." Unlike the Pounds and the Eliots, this new generation was more conscious of itself as a group, being the product of public school-university-Bloomsbury conditioning. Although some for sook organized Christianity, their loss of faith in nationalism and religion made it necessary for them to find something else to believe in, and this was Marxism. To Orwell, this "Communism" of the English intellectual was nothing more than the patriotism of the de racinated. 60 Nor were intellectuals of the 1930s egalitarians. Like their "mystagogic" mentors, the temperament was decidedly elitist, sani tized of working-class life and values. As is the case with all elites, these writers were prepared to impose their vision of socialism on the rest of society. A distinctive feature of those on the communist Left was their style of thinking, which was essentially the same as the style of those on the Catholic Right who had either moved into the fascist camp or served as fellow travelers. Neither side would brook a heretic. In other words, as was so graphically revealed with the Catholic Right during the Spanish Civil War, criticism and independent thinking were not allowed. Orwell discovered this for himself when Victor Gollancz of the Left Book Club refused to publish Homage to Catalonia and Animal Farm and when the left-wing New Statesman
Completing the Circle 3 93
turned down his articles on Spain, in both instances because he made inconvenient, unorthodox political observations. The Right responded in kind. T. S. Eliot at Faber and Faber declined to pub lish Animal Farm because "we have no conviction . . . that this is the right point of view from which to criticize the political situation at the present time."61 At this point the term "totalitarian" had not yet become a household word, but Orwell was one of the first to recognize that the similarities between communism and fascism were more significant than their differences: "the sin of nearly all left-wingers from 1933 onwards is that they have wanted to be anti Fascist without being anti-totalitarian."62 The same substantive criticism, of course, was made by Father Gosling in his debates with Woodruff. George Orwell understood the mind-set of the conservative Catholics as well as any. He also knew that their line of thinking found generous institutional support. From the outset of the Church's struggle with modernity it found natural allies among political reac tionaries. The first and most loyal defenders of the ancien regime, with which the Church was intimately entwined, were inevitably aristocrats and monarchists who were defending their social and economic privileges. This coalition for the maintenance of the status quo expanded in the later nineteenth century to include the upper middle classes who had succeeded in enlarging their property through industry and finance. These same elements in the twentieth century could be depended upon to support the Church's struggle against atheistic communism. 63 Adding to the strength of conservatives who rallied to the defense of the Church was an institutional anti-liberal tradition that accompanied the Vatican's struggle with Enlightenment rational ism. Reactionary sentiment within Church officialdom reached its zenith in 1832 when Pope Gregory XVI condemned Felicite de Lamennais (Mirai vos), dealing a near fatal blow not only to liberal philosophy but also to "liberal Catholicism'' as a political movement. Karl von Vogelsang and the Vienna School, along with de Maistre and Frederic Le Play in France, went further along this trajectory by articulating a romantic alternative to the capitalist order that called for an authoritarian guild society designed to restore a pre revolutionary, pre-liberal form of living.
3 94 CAT H O L I C I N T E LLECTUALS AND T H E CHALLENGE OF D E M O C RACY
While part of its political vision remained unrealistically me dieval, the Church's very institutional survival in most European countries demanded a secular incorporation with the propertied classes. Thus by the end of the nineteenth century the Catholic Church had developed a stake in the maintenance of the status quo and was therefore reluctant to support alterations in power arrange ments. This served to alienate the laboring masses. The history of the Spanish Civil War is a vivid illustration of this dynamic. Liberal Catholic social activists such as George Shuster and Luigi Sturzo warned of the dangers of this power relationship, citing Spain as a living example ofits consequences, but for the most part they failed to generate institutional support for their views. Caught up in the maelstrom of anticommunism, their fellow Catholics, both lay and clerical, remained unmoved by the programs of Christian renewal set forth in the social encyclicals. By this juncture their fear was god less Marxism, a very real threat to the faith, and all the Church's energies were devoted to the struggle against communism. On the other hand, those aspects of the Catholic political con sciousness that had been conditioned by nostalgia for an "organic" medieval order unsoiled by the modern diseases of capitalism and communism (for the integralists, both were the offspring of liberal philosophy) fit closely with the rhetoric of fascist and Nazi theo reticians. By appropriating the vocabulary of organic thought the totalitarians of the Right were able to garner wide support among bourgeois Catholics threatened by the breakdown of the capitalist world order and the expansion of communism. 64 The fascist propaganda campaign was abetted by right-wing Catholic intellectuals, who, in blindingly uncritical fashion, sought allies from any quarter to fight the atheistic, materialist threat of Marxism. As Kevin L. Morris has pointed out, why should Catho lics in general have been suspicious of Fascism when so many of the Church's charismatic literati closed the door to any close exami nation of the creed and its continental practitioners? It is disap pointing, wrote Morris, "that their grasp of what was good in republicanism, parliamentarianism, and Christian democracy was so frail while, in a most un-Catholic manner, to different degrees they acquired faith in a novelty, a modern secular panacea."65
Completing the Circle 3 95
The points of light represented by the liberal thinkers given prominence in this book represent the other face of Catholicism: historically, they can be seen as the spiritual forerunners of today's Catholics who identify with and celebrate the progressive, demo cratic legacy of their faith. 66 Such thinkers affirm the central thesis of this study, namely, that the Catholic tradition has been flexible enough to adjust to the architecture of modern secular culture and, at the same time, offer new and imaginative solutions to the prob lems that have grown out ofit. The great social thinkers of the nine teenth century had long warned of the collapse of capitalism (to which fascism was in part a response) and the dehumanizing poten tial of Marxism. The liberal Catholics provided a rational solution to the ills of industrial society through the infusion of Christian values into a purely materialistic economic system.67 They accom plished this by drawing on the legacy of Catholic social teaching, proving that there was nothing inherently reactionary in a religious tradition which, through the voluminous contributions of the Church fathers, had evolved symbiotically with the Western secular his torical experience. 68 In the final analysis, it was not Catholicism that failed; rather, individual Catholics failed their historical heritage. The point was insightfully made by Barbara Ward in her analysis of the Church and fascism. If Catholics, wrote Ward, "had known Rerum Novarum as communists knew Marx, if their activities in the spiritual sphere had been as revolutionary as those of the Fascists in the material order, the masses in Europe would not have been brought to the impasse where, every rational order having failed, they grasped at the solution of unreason."69
Notes
Introduction I. For a highly critical assessment of the outcome of aggiornamento see James Hitchcock, The Decline and Fall of Radical Catholicism (New York, 1971) , and Benedict M. Ashley, O.P. , "The Loss of Theological Unity: Pluralism, Thomism, and Catholic Morality," in Mary Jo Weaver and R. Scott Appleby, eds., Being Right: Conservative Catholics in America (Bloomington, Ind. , 1995) . Anti-modernist, anti-Vatican II positions are also a regular feature of the magazine The Wanderer. More orthodox views can also be found in the Catholic Social Science Review. 2. Langdon Gilkey, Catholicism Confronts Modernity (New York, 1975), pp. 34-35, as discussed and quoted in Jay P. Dolan, The American Catholic Experience: A Historyfrom Colonial Times to the Present (Garden City, N .Y., 1987), p. 428. The Catholic historian of Christian democracy Hans Maier makes the same argument: "The Protestant churches were spared the harsh cut of secularization, not least because a lengthy process of secularization had already achieved what Catholicism was forced to achieve in one short period. Many of the ideas which surfaced during the French and the American revolutions were already domesticated in Protestantism'' (Revo
lution and Church: The Early History of Christian Democracy, q89-I90I [Notre Dame, Ind. , 1965] , p. 25) . 3 . A myriad o f historians and political commentators who have dealt with the issues and experiences of social change in Europe and America have noted how Catholicism served socially regressive and politically reac tionary causes. The following list is by no means complete but illustrates the point. For Germany, see the works of Guenter Lewy, Gordon Zahn, Waldemar Gurian, Richard Rolfs, and Walter Adolph. For France, see Eugen Weber, Robert 0. Paxton, J. S. McClelland, and Richard Griffiths. 3 97
3 9 8 Notes to Pages 2-.J
For Britain, see J. R. Jones, Alastair Hamilton, Colin Cross, John R. Harrison, and Margaret George. For America, see John Patrick Diggins, Alan Brinkley, James P. Shenton, and George Seldes. 4. This argument has been made elsewhere as well. See the discus sion that followed the presentation of Paul E. Sigmund's paper "The Catholic Tradition and Modern Democracy" at a conference at the Uni versity of Notre Dame sponsored by the Review ofPolitics and the Office of Policy Studies, February 1986, in Leslie Griffin, ed. , Religion and Poli tics in the American Milieu (Notre Dame, Ind., 1986). 5. There are some recent exceptions. See Thomas Bokenkotter, Church
and Revolution: Catholics in the Struggle far Democracy and Social Justice (New York, 1998). Of course, others have seen problems with liberal trends in the post-Vatican II era. Msgr. George A. Kelly, for example, believes that American Catholics have made a major mistake attempting to arrive at a peaceful coexistence with forces of the French Enlightenment and philoso phies that underpin the modus operandi of modernity. If the renewal prom ised by John XXIII has failed, he argues, it is because blocs of bishops were more willing to follow "the thinking of Rudolf Bultmann, Martin Hei degger, Max Weber, or Carl Rogers than the wisdom contained in Mat thew, Mark, Luke, and John, along with a variety of Pauls and Piuses down through the centuries" (Battle far the American Church (Revisited} [San Francisco, 1995] , p. 139). See also Joseph A. Varacalli, Toward the Estab lishment ofLiberal Catholicism in America (Washington, D.C., 1983) . 6. This tradition can be seen as part of the continuing effort to reify Vatican I and the idea of a papal monarchy. In the view of Rosemary Rad ford Ruether and Eugene C. Bianchi, and the contributors to their book on Catholic Church governance, such endeavors are essentially unhistori cal. They are grounded on the notion that the Church is an unchanging hierarchy of being and social order firmly placed in a sacral cosmos out side and impervious to human experience. Bianchi, for his part, funda mentally disagrees with the commonly accepted notion that "the church is not a democracy" and offers compelling historical evidence that plural istic ideas and administrative structures have been deeply rooted in the Catholic tradition from its earliest sources. (See his "A Democratic Church: Task for the Twenty-First Century," pp. 34-51, in Eugene C. Bianchi and Rosemary Radford Ruether, eds., A Democratic Catholic Church: The Re construction of Roman Catholicism [New York, 1992] . For a critical assess ment of this approach see the works of George Weigel, especially his Freedom and Its Discontents: Catholicism Confronts Modernity [Washing ton, D.C., 1991] .)
Notes to Pages 4/ 399
7. American Catholic leaders from the outset interpreted &rum Nova rum in a narrow and restrictive fashion, emphasizing its anti-socialism at the expense of the encyclical's equally strong warnings about the excesses of capitalism and its pro-labor and social reformist messages. However, thanks to the pioneering work ofFathers John Ryan, Peter Dietz, William Kerky, and others, the American Church after World War I officially committed itself to progressive reform. The culmination ofJohn Ryan's efforts to merge Catholic social thought with American progressivism came in February 1919 with the promulgation of the "Bishops' Program of Social Reconstruction," a proposal to link Leonine social teachings to the conditions and needs of the times. This represented the most advanced, forward-looking social document ever to come from an official agency of American Catholicism (Francis L. Broderick, Right ReverendNew Dealer john A. Ryan [New York, 1963 ] , p. 105) . Its appearance was given formi dable fanfare by the Catholic press, and the daring and imaginative pro posals of the program (including a minimum wage and working age, public housing, and old age and health insurance) had the effect of shift ing the popular impression that Catholicism was socially and politically conservative. Implementing the social gospel now became part of the Catholic mission. In the words of historian Jay P. Dolan, "Catholics were now known not just for what they opposed-socialism-but also for what they advocated: social reform'' (Dolan, The American Catholic Experience, p. 345). Within a decade, however, this social and political progressivism was drowned out by the Catholic crusade against socialism.
8. In some ways this anti-liberal tradition prepared the ground for the emergence of the "new conservatism" of Catholic traditionalists whose influence has been considerable in America since the era of Ronald Rea gan. For a discussion of such Catholics see Patrick Allitt, Catholic Intel lectuals and Conservative Politics in America, I950-I985 (Ithaca, N.Y. , 1993). 9 . See Guenter Lewy, The Catholic Church and Nazi Germany (New York, 1964) and Religion and Revolution (New York, 1974) . r o . This is the judgment ofJohn Patrick Diggins. See his ''American Catholics and Italian Fascism," journal of Contemporary History 2, no. 4 (1967) : 68. n . Walter Lippmann, ''Autocracy Versus Catholicism," Commonweal, 13 April 1927, p. 627. Reinhold was a close friend of Luigi Sturzo and played a key role in helping him emigrate to the United States. See Rein hold's letters to Sturzo, "Correspondence: S File," Reinhold Papers, Burns Library, Boston College. Yet another non-Catholic, the eminent German economist Theodore Ropke, also pointed out that Catholics should be led to condemn fascism
400
Notes to Pages /II
on moral grounds because it fundamentally contradicted Church teachings. See his "Fascist Economics," Economica 2 0, no. 5 (1935): 35-100. Not surprisingly, Hilaire Belloc had no liking for Lippmann's liber alism. Writing to Hoffman Nickerson, Belloc said that he had "met the Jew Lippmann once or twice . . . . He has to the full the Jewish quality of understanding the superficial and obvious thing in any European affair . . . but never getting anything beyond that, and making a complete muddle of half the motives of the European'' (Belloc to Nickerson, 6 September 1938, Belloc/Nickerson Correspondence, Hoffman Nickerson Collection, Burns Library). 12. Michael P. Fogarty, for instance, argues that liberalism along with socialism provided for Christians excellent examples of improved com munity management which they should have been able to see for them selves from the principles of Catholic social doctrine. Christians returned the favor: their resistance to statism and the tyranny of majority rule at the expense of different spiritual communities forced liberals and socialists "to face up to the true meaning of their own principle of tolerance in a plural society" ( Christian Democracy in Western Europe, r820-r950 [Notre Dame, Ind., 1957] , p. 15 2 ) . 13. For a broad historical overview o f how these issues played out in American Catholic experience see David J. O'Brien, Public Catholicism (Maryknoll, N.Y., 1996); Margaret Mary Reher, Catholic Intellectual Life in America: A Historical Profile ofPersons andMovements (New York, 1989); George Weigel, Freedom and Its Discontents: Catholicism Confronts Moder nity (Washington, D.C., 1991) and Catholicism and the Renewal ofAmeri can Democracy (New York, 1989); and Michael Novak, Freedom withJustice: Catholic Socia/ Thought and Liberal Institutions (New York, 1984) .
Chapter
I.
European Catholics Confront Revolution
l. Qyoted in Raymond Corrigan, S.J., The Church and the Nineteenth Century (Milwaukee, Wis. , 1938), p. 4. 2. A discussion of Sozialrefarm and its opposite, a willingness to seek reforms through the existing social framework (Sozialpolitik), can be found in Heinz Herber, Eine wirtschaftssoziologische Ideengeschichte der neueren Katholischen Soziallehren in Deutsch/and (doctoral diss., University of Bern,
1933). 3. The term "liberal" Catholic has a special meaning in this study. It refers to those Catholics who were accommodationists, that is, willing
Notes to Pages u-12 401
to engage and grapple with the issues of modern industrial society through the prism of democratic ideas that evolved out of the English and Ameri can revolutionary experiences. In the words of Mary Jo Weaver, "liberal ism'' is "an embracing term for those who welcome modernity and adopt many of its cultural markers" ( What's Left? Liberal American Catholics [Bloomington, Ind., 1999] , p. xi) . In this respect "liberal" Catholics fall within the tradition of Sozialpolitik and, in later years, were active in the school of social reform known as "Christian democracy." See Michael P. Fogarty, Christian Democracy in Western Europe, z820-z950 (Notre Dame, Ind., 1957) . For a further discussion and definition of the meaning of "liberal" Catholicism and its relationship with Christian democracy see Hans Maier, Revolution and Church: The Early History of Christian Democracy, trans. Emily M. Schossberger (Notre Dame, Ind. , 1965) , pp. l-28 and Appendix, pp. 290-297. Maier argues that Christian democracy recog nized democracy as the surest guarantee of Catholic security and thus obli gated the Church theologically toward democratic solutions (p. 22) . A discussion of these ideas as applied to the American experience is found in the writings ofJohn Courtney Murray, S.J. See his "Contemporary Ori entations of Catholic Thought on Church and State in the Light of His tory," Theological Studies ro (1949): IJ/234· My use of the term "liberal" Catholic should not be associated with what Kenneth L. Grasso and others have identified as "liberalism." Grasso has described liberalism as a particular theory ofpolitics which rejects tele
ology and is driven by an inner logic that subordinates everything to the promotion ofindividualism. None of the liberal Catholics discussed in my study would have accepted such a model for the advancement of their cause. (See his "Beyond Liberalism: Human Dignity, the Free Society, and the Second Vatican Council," in Kenneth L. Grasso, Gerard V. Bradley, and Robert P. Hunt, eds., Catholicism, Liberalism, and Communitarianism:
The Catholic Intellectual Tradition and the Moral Foundations ofDemocracy [Lanham, Md., 1995] . ) 4. The idea of"social deaconry'' is developed fully by Edgar Alexan der, "Church and Society in Germany," in Joseph N. Moody, ed., Church and Society (New York, 1953). 5. Qyoted in Robert Cross, The Emergence of Liberal Catholicism (Cambridge, Mass. , 1967), p. 9 . 6. For a n examination o f Ozanam's career and contributions t o social Catholicism see James Patrick Derum, Apostle in a Top Hat: the Life of Frederic Ozanam (New York, 1960); Kathleen O'Meara, Frederic Ozanam
4 02 Notes to Pages 12-22
(New York, 1883), preface by Cardinal Manning; Henry Louis Hughes, Frederick Ozanam (London, 1933); L. Celier, Ozanam (Paris, 1956); E. Galo pin, Essai de bibliographic chronologique surAntoine-Frederic Ozanam (Paris, 1933); G. Goyau, Ozanam (Paris, 1925); and Albert Paul Schimberg, Fred erick Ozanam (Milwaukee, Wis., 1966). Ozanam's career and influence on the development of social Catholicism are also discussed in Thomas Bokenkotter's Church and Revolution: Catholics in the Strugglefor Democ racy and Socia/justice (New York, 1998). 7. From Lillian Parker Wallace, Leo XIII and the Rise of Socialism (Durham, N.C., 1966), p. 186. 8. Cross, Emergence ofLiberal Catholicism, p. I I . 9 . H. L. Hughes, Frederick Ozanam (London, 1933), p. 56. I O . Ibid., p. 53· I I . Ozanam had in fact begun to study the social question some twelve years earlier than Marx. His own views on social problems and the role of religion were informed by the writings of Louis Veuillot, Jean Baptiste Henri Dominique Lacordaire, Vicomte Armand de Melun, Villeneuve Bargemont, and others. 12. French revolutionists had outlawed labor unions in July 1791 on the grounds that they were a danger to individual freedom. The text of the law read: "No longer will there be corporations in the state; there remains
only the interest of each individual person'' (from I. Voshchynin, Solidarism and Economics [n.d. ] , unpublished translation by Joseph Curran, p. 2) . 13. John A. Ryan and Joseph Husslein, The Church and Labor (New York, 1920), p. 18. 14. Kathleen O'Meara (Grace Ramsay) , Frederic Ozanam: His Life and Work (New York, 1883), p. 225. 15. Extraits de !'Ere Nouvelle, vol. 7, p. 272, from O'Meara, Frederic Ozanam, p. 238 . 16. James Patrick Derum, Apostle in a Top Hat: the Story ofFrederic Ozanam (St. Clair, Mich., 1962), p. 177. 17. O'Meara, Frederic Ozanam, p. 236. 18. The best study of Ketteler is Fritz Vigener, Kettler. Ein deutsches Bischofsleben aus dem I9. fahrhundert (Munich, 1924) . See also William E. Hogan, The Development of William Emmanuel von Ketteler's Interpretation ofthe Social Problem (Washington, D.C., 1946). 19. George Metlake (pen-name for J. J. Laux), Christian Social
Reform: Program Outlined by Its Pioneer, W. E. Baron von Ketteler, Bishop ofMainz (Philadelphia, 1923), p. 224. 20. Kettler defined it as "self-seeking gone wild on the part of those who hold the reins of state power" (Bishop Wilhelm Emmanuel von Ket-
Notes to Pages 22-33 403
teler, "Freedom, Authority, and the Church," trans. Rupert]. Ederer, Social
Justice Review, March 1976, p. 359). 21. Ketteler, "Freedom, Authority, and the Church," trans. Rupert J. Ederer, Socia/justice Review, April 1976, p. 7. 22. Wallace, Leo XIIL p. 184. 23. From Metlake, Christian Social Reform, pp. 231-232. 24. Ketteler, "The Relationship of the Labor Movement to Religion and Morality," trans. Rupert J. Ederer, Socialjustice Review, May 1976, p. 37. 25. Metlake, Christian Social Reform, p. 230. 26. From Ryan and Husslein, Church and Labor, p. 42. 27. Metlake, Christian Social Reform, p. 160. 28. Ibid., p. 127. 29. From "On the Care of the Church for Factory Workpeople, Jour neymen, Apprentices and Servant Girls," paper delivered at the Confer ence of Fulda, 5 September 1869, quoted in Metlake, Christian Social Reform, pp. 181-182. 30. Qyoted in Metlake, ibid., p. 48: "not poverty, but corruption of the heart, is the source of our social misery." 31. Henry Somerville, The Catholic Social Movement (London, 1933), p. 41. 32. Ryan and Husslein, Church and Labor, p. 44. 33 . Metlake, Christian Social Reform, p. 206. 34. Ketteler, "The Relationship of the Labor Movement to Religion and Morality," trans. Rupert]. Ederer, Socia/justice Review, May 1975, p. 36. 35. Metlake, Christian Social Reform, p. 215. 36. See Alexander in Moody, ed. , Church and Society, p. 430 . This author considers Hitze to be the best living example of the Catholic social deacon, "beyond suspicion of clerical narrow-mindedness or clerical pres sure politics," fully committed "to the social interests of the nation as a whole." 37. A more complete coverage of Vogelsang's career can be found in Johann Allmayer-Beck, Vogelsang: Vom feudalismus zur Volksbewegung (Vienna, 1952) . 38. Alfred Diamant, Austrian Catholics and the First Republic: Democ racy, Capitalism, and the Social Order, r9r8-r934 (Princeton, N.J., 1960), p. 42. 39. Anti-Semitism was pervasive throughout aristocratic and bour geois classes in nineteenth-century Europe and it was especially strong in central-European Catholic circles. These sentiments even spilled over into the judgments of liberal-minded scholars. For example, Francesco S. Nitti, an esteemed professor of political economy at the University of
Naples and an authority on Catholic social philosophy, who claimed his methodology was "positive" in the Comtian tradition and his treatment of subjects "strictly objective," could write the following in trying to explain why the Austrian Christian Social Movement was anti-Semitic (from Catholic Socialism, London, 1895): "We must not lose sight of the fact that, especially in Austria and Hungary, the Jews enjoy an almost exclusive monopoly of industrial revenue, nor should we forget that the press, the banks, and the stock-exchange are all in the hands ofJews . . . . In a coun try [Austria] where the aristocracy of capital is almost entirely Jewish, where the old feudal nobility, as well as the small landed proprietors, are threatened with being absorbed by the Jews, it is easy to understand the welcome and success which met the theories of the Catholic Socialists, and that they found a soil disposed to receive them and to render them fruitful" (pp. 200 and 202). Even the English liberal Catholic, Henry Somerville, a harsh critic of Hitler and Mussolini, explained in 1933 that the "marked anti-capitalism'' of the Hapsburg countries could be attributed to the fact that "their capi talist class was [to] an amazing degree Jewish, and its yoke more hateful because it was alien" ( The Catholic Social Movement, p. 75) . 40 . Andrew Whiteside, "Austria," i n Hans Rogger and Eugen Weber, eds. , The European Right: a Historical Profile (Berkeley, Cali£ , 1966), p. 322. 41. Alexander in Moody, ed., Church and Society, p. 421. 42. For a fuller discussion of this see Diamant, Austrian Catholics and the First Republic, pp. 54-63. 43. Alexander in Moody, ed., Church and Society, p. 425. 44. See Parker Moon, The Social Catholic Movement (New York, 1921), p. 61. 45. Parker Moon argues that de Mun and La Tour du Pin were in spired to become involved in Catholic social action after having heard about Ketteler's work during their imprisonment in Germany (Moon, Social Catholic Movement, p. IJ8). 46. Moon, Social Catholic Movement, p. 85. The clubs failed to attract large numbers ofindustrial workers owing partly, it appears, to their reluc tance to join organizations controlled by paternalistic aristocrats and a basic inability to understand why the upper classes would be involved in labor movements. 47. Ibid., p. 86. 48. See Paul Misner, Social Catholicism in Europe: From the Onset of Industrialization to the First World War (New York, 1991), chapter 9 . Mis-
Notes to Pages 38-44 4 05
ner also shows linkages between Vogelsang, La Tour du Pin, and Charles Maurras (p. 181) . 49. Moon, Social Catholic Movement, p. 104. 50. Ibid., pp. 143-144.
Chapter 2. The Development of Catholic Social Action in Nineteenth-Century England 1. Robert Cross claims that Newman was the "the greatest liberal Catholic spokesman to modern culture." (See his The Emergence ofLiberal Catholicism [Cambridge, Mass., 1967] , p. 13.) For more on Newman con sult Ian Ker, john Henry Newman: a Biography (Oxford, 1988). Ker regards Newman as a figure of monumental genius, whose ideas ranged from con servative to radical. See also Sheridan Gilley, Newman and His Age (Lon don, 1990). 2. In Raymond ]. Corrigan, S.J., The Church and the Nineteenth Cen tury (Milwaukee, Wis., 1938), p. 155. 3 . See Alva S . Ryan, "The Development of Newman's Political Thought," Review ofPolitics 7 (1945): 210-240. Ryan believes that New man charted a course later taken by Jacques Maritain, Luigi Sturzo, and Christopher Dawson. 4. Alec Vilder, "The Tractarian Movement, Church Revival and Reform," in Harmon Grisewood et al., eds . , Ideas and Beliefs ofthe Victo rians (New York, 1966), p. II8. 5. Newman wrote to W. B . Ullathorne, Bishop of Birmingham, in August 1887: "I have been indoors all my life, whilest you have battled for the Church in the World" {from Vincent Alan McClelland, Cardinal Manning: His Public Life and Influence, I86S-I892 [London, 1962] , p. 22). 6. Vilder, "The Tractarian Movement," p. II8. 7. Ronald Knox, "Newman and Roman Catholicism," in Grise wood, Ideas and Beliefs ofthe Victorians, p. 129. 8 . Robert Gray, Cardinal Manning: a Biography (London, 1985) , p. 304. 9. From Henry E. Manning, ''A Charge Delivered at the Ordinary Visitation of the Archdeaconry of Chichester," London, 1842, p. 35, in McClelland, Cardinal Manning, p. II. 10. Shane Leslie, Cardinal Manning: His Life and Labours (New York, 1921), p. 348. II. Hilaire Belloc, The Cruise ofthe Nona {London, 1925), p. 48.
4 06 Notes to Pages 44-5 1
12. Ibid., p. 48. 13. Dermot Qyinn, Patronage and Piety: the Politics ofEnglish Roman Catholicism, I850-I900 (Stanford, Cali£, 1993), p. 184. 14. Qyoted in Gray, Cardinal Manning, p. 147. 15. The census in 1851 recorded that 519,959 living in England had been born in Ireland, 75 percent of whom were estimated to be Roman Catholic. The total Catholic population of England was calculated at 679,067. (See G. Kitson Clark, The Making of Victorian England [New York, 1969] , p. 165, n. 2.) 16. From Gray, Cardinal Manning, p. 272. 17. From McClelland, Cardinal Manning, p. 21. 18. Henry E. Manning, "On the Subjects Proper to Academia," Ses sion 1866/, from his Miscellanies [London, 1877] , vol. 3, p. 95. 19. A good discussion of Manning's friendship with Sir Charles Dilke, along with a brief discussion of his activities with Dilke on the Royal Commission on the Housing of the Working Classes, can be found in Francis Bywater, "Cardinal Manning and the Dilke Divorce Case," The Chesterton Review, vol. 18, no. 4 (November 1992): 539-553 . 20. Henry Slesser, "Forword," in abridged version of Shane Leslie's Cardinal Manning: His Life and Labours (New York, 1958), p. xx. 21. Gray, Cardinal Manning, p. 301. 22. Leslie, Cardinal Manning, pp. 348-349. 23 . Ibid., p. 349. 24. McClelland, Cardinal Manning, p. 23 . 25. Leslie, Cardinal Manning, p. 350. 26. McClelland, Cardinal Manning, p. 135. For a fuller discussion of how and why labor should be regarded as property see Henry E. Manning, The Dignity and Rights of Labour (London, 1934) . As Manning saw it, "whatever rights capital possesses, labor possesses" (p. 18) . A short but suc cinct description of Manning's Christian social vision can be found in V. A. McClelland, "Manning's Work for Social Justice," The Chesterton Review, vol. 18, no. 4 (November 1992): 525-537. See also Thomas Boken kotter, Church and Revolution: Catholics in the Strugglefar Democracy and Socialjustice (New York, 1998), chapter 6: ''A Bishop Who Heard What Marx Was Saying: Henry Edward Manning (1808-1892) ." 27. Leslie, Cardinal Manning, p. 367. 28. Manning, The Times, November 1886. 29. Leslie, Cardinal Manning, p. 368. 30. Bokenkotter, Church and Revolution, p. 194. 31. Gray, Cardinal Manning, p, 302.
Notes to Pages 52-62 407
32. Ibid., p. 304. 33. For Manning's role in settling the dock strike see Terry McCarthy,
The Great Dock Strike ojI889: The Story ofthe Labour Movement's First Great Victory (London, 1988), and Tom Mann, Memoirs (London, 1923). 34. Leslie, Cardinal Manning, p. 376. 35. Manning, Dublin Review, July 1891, p. 163 . 36. Leslie, Cardinal Manning, p . 362. 37- Manning, Dublin Review, April 191738. Corrigan, The Church and the Nineteenth Century, p. 162. 39. The Gazette de Liege, 8 September 1890, from Francesco S . Nitti, Catholic Socialism (London, 1895), pp. 319-320. 40. Ibid., pp. 319-320. 4L Bokenkotter notes that Manning's labors for the cause of social justice were so emphatic that they became a permanent legacy of the En glish Church in spite ofits generally conservative character (Bokenkotter, Church and Revolution, p. 204). 42. Slesser, in Leslie, Cardinal Manning, p. xx.
Chapter 3. Leo XIII and the Principles of Rerum Novarum I.
Michael P. Fogarty, Christian Democracy in Western Europe,
I820-I953 (Notre Dame, Ind. , 1957), p. 7.
2. Pope Leo XIII, The Church and Civilization (New York, 1878), pp. w-n . Qyoted in Raymond H. Schmandt, "The Life and Work of Leo XIII," p. 20, in Edward T. Gargan, ed. , Leo XIII and the Modern World (New York, 1961). 3. A papal encyclical is a pastoral letter similar to those delivered by bishops to the Catholics of their diocese. But since the pope is Bishop of Rome and the successor of St. Peter, as head of the Christian community his letter (encyclical) is addressed to all Catholics and, in many cases, to all people irrespective of race, nation, or creed. Unlike an ecumenical coun cil, an encyclical does not define doctrine but is rather designed to inter pret the teaching of the Church concerning problems that arise in everyday affairs. In this respect, the encyclical is the paramount pedagogical tool of the Church, the vehicle by which the pope teaches the Christian com munity. Since the pope imparts his knowledge with the higher guidance of the Holy Spirit, and on matters of faith is infallible, going against the teaching of an encyclical can place the Catholic in danger of serious error.
4 08 Notes to Pages 62-65
4. See Schmandt, "Life and Work of Leo XIII," p. 34. 5. It should be pointed out, however, that it was never Pope Leo XIII's intention to open the Church to the secular forces of the day, in effect "modernizing" the Vatican. As Thomas Bokenkotter has observed, Leo was a political realist who recognized that the Church's past efforts at linking throne and altar were doomed. He rather saw the practical neces sity of reorienting the Church to the people as a safer path for restoring Christendom and his own temporal power: in this sense democracy was a better means than monarchy for achieving traditional ends. See Thomas Bokenkotter, Church and Revolution: Catholics in the Strugglefar Democracy and Socia/justice (New York, 1998), p. 242. 6. John McManners, Church and State in France, I870-I9I4 (London, 1972), p. 46. 7. Ibid., p. 48. 8. Joseph N. Moody, "The Church and the New Forces in Western Europe and Italy," in Joseph N. Moody, ed., Church and Society: Catholic Social and Political Thought and Movements, q89-I950 (New York, 1953), p. 69. 9 . From Immortale Dei, article 18, in Joseph Husslein, S.J. , Social Wellsprings: Fourteen Epochal Documents by Pope Leo XIII (Milwaukee, Wis. , 1940), p. 83 . ro.
There has been much confusion about liberalism among Catho
lics. Liberal Catholics have always asserted that continental liberalism rep resented a perversion of true liberalism. A leading Catholic authority on this subject, John Courtney Murray, S .J., has argued that continental lib eralism and French revolutionary ideology have nothing in common with liberalism as it is known in Britain and the United States, repre senting instead a "deformation of the liberal tradition," simply another form of "absolutist state-monism, to which the liberal tradition stands in opposition" ("The Problem of State Religion," Theological Studies 12 [1951] : 162) . Those conservative Catholics who assailed liberalism in the interwar years failed to note the difference between these two different forms of political philosophy. The reasons for this failure are complex, but certainly a good number of the anti-liberal Catholics made no effort at distinction because they themselves were inherently hostile to democracy. Yet, as Murray pointed out, even to this day European students of canon law are unaware of the difference between Jacobin and Anglo- S axon liberal democratic thinking. Murray believed that the battle with continental lib eralism was so great that it drowned out the voices of American liberalism, so in European Catholic academic circles they were never given a fair hear ing. (See ibid., p. 164.)
Notes to Pages 66/8 409
For more on the life and ideas ofJohn Courtney Murray, see Don ald E. Pelotte, John Courtney Murrary: Theologian in Conflict (New York, 1976). 11. From The Declaration of the Rights ofMan and of the Citizen, in Introduction to Contemporary Civilization in the Wt?st, prepared by Colum bia College, vol. 2 (New York, 1961), p. 34. 12. Qyoted in "The Decline and Fall of the French Revolution," New York Review ofBooks, 15 February 1990, p. 49. 13. Ibid., p. 50. 14. Joseph Emmanuel Sieyes, "What is the Third Estate?", in Intro duction to Contemporary Civilization, vol. 2, p. 31. 15. From Marcel Gauchet, "Rights of Man," in Francois Furet and Mona Ozouf, eds. , A Critical Dictionary ofthe French Revolution (Cam bridge, Mass., 1989), p. 821. 16. "In truth, that the source of human power is God the books of the Old Testament in very many places clearly establish. 'By me kings reign . . . by me princes rule, and the mighty decree justice."' Diuturnum, Article 9, as cited in Etienne Gilson, ed. , The Church Speaks to the Modern World: The Socia/ Teachings ofLeo Xlll (Garden City, N.Y. , 1954), p. 144. 17. Diuturnum, Article 11, Gilson, p. 151. 18. The encyclical Diuturnum was drafted in the wake of Tsar Alexander H's assassination; the incident most certainly had an impact on the pope's thoughts on civil obedience. 19. Diuturnum, Article 11, Gilson, p. 145. 20. This would become a burning and divisive issue for Catholics dur ing the 1930s in Spain, when many Catholics supported Franco's resort to force against the Spanish Republic. The issue is examined in chapters 12 and 13 of this book. 21. Joseph N. Moody, "Leo XIII and the Social Crisis," in Edward T. Gargan, ed., Leo XIII and the Modern World (New York, 196!), p. 73. 22. Rerum Novarum, Article 3, Gilson, pp. 206-207. 23. Rerum Novarum, Article 19, Gilson, p. 214. 24. John A. Ryan and Joseph Husslein, The Church and Labor (New York, 1920), p. xii. 25. Rerum Novarum, Article 5, Gilson, p. 207. 26. Rerum Novarum, Article 20, Gilson, pp. 215-216. 27. Rerum Novarum, Article 47, Gilson, p. 231. 28. Rerum Novarum, Article 62, Gilson, pp. 238-239. 29. Rerum Novarum, Article 14, Gilson, pp. 212. 30. Rerum Novarum, Article 32, Gilson, pp. 222. 31. Rerum Novarum, Article 36, Gilson, pp. 225.
410 Notes to Pages 79-84
32. Pope Leo XIII quoting from Ecclesiastes, 4:9-ro, Rerum Novarum, Article 50, Gilson, p. 232. 33 . Rerum Novarum, Article 55, Gilson, p. 235. 34. Rerum Novarum, Article 45, Gilson, pp. 230. 35. Rerum Novarum, Article 56, Gilson, pp. 235-236. 36. Wallace, Leo XIIL p. 273 . Rerum Novarum's insistence that work ers act independently of the state and that they should organize according to their own nature {apart from the employer) stands in sharp contrast to the fascist corporatist theories that prevailed in the 1930s. This issue is examined in some detail in chapters 7 and 8 . 37. The Austrian and French corporativists, fo r example, did not want owners to share power with labor and in general showed no appreciation of the European working class's increasing self-confidence. {See Moody, "Leo XIII and the Social Crisis," in Gargan, p. 79.) 38. Rerum Novarum, Article 58, Gilson, pp. 237.
Chapter 4. The Appearance of the "Chesterbelloc" l. Christopher Hollis, "Social Evolution in Modem English Catho licism," p. 823, in Joseph N . Moody, ed., Church and Society: Catholic Social and Political Thought and Movements, q89-I950 {New York, 1953). 2. Leslie Toke, "Some Methods of Social Study," Downside Review, March 1907, p. 3. Reprinted by the London Catholic Truth Society, 1908. 3 . J. G. Snead-Cox, The Life of Cardinal Vaughan {London, l9ro), vol. l, p. 2. 4. Qyoted in Mary Vivian Brand, The Social Catholic Movement in England {New York, 1963), p. 7. 5. Qyoted from E. R. Norman, The English Catholic Church in the I9th Century (Oxford, 1964), p. 352. 6. F. Rogers, Labour, Life and Literature: Some Memories ofSixty Years {London, 1913), p. 246. 7. Qyoted in Georgiana Putnam McEntee, The Social Catholic Move ment in Great Britain (New York, 1927), p. 152. 8. Snead-Cox, Life of Cardinal Vaughan, vol. l, p. 457. 9 . Sheridan Gilley, "Manning and Chesterton," The Chesterton Review, vol. 18, no. 4 {November 1992): 492. I O . Denis Rolleston Gwynn, A Hundred Years of Catholic Emancipa tion (I829-I929) {London, 1929), p. 227. n . See Snead-Cox, Life of Cardinal Vaughan, vol. l, pp. 457 and 476 . 1 2 . McEntee, Social Catholic Movement, p . 155·
Notes to Pages 85-95 411
lJ. Snead-Cox, Life of Cardinal Vaughan, vol. l, p. 197· 14. All this was the result of "a quaint instance of unfamiliarity with ordinary social terminology," wrote Leslie Toke. See Leslie Toke, Some Methods ofSocial Study {London, 1908), p. 2. 15. Ibid., p. 4. 16. See Toke, Some Methods ofSocial Study. 17. McEntee, Social Catholic Movement, p. 189. 18. Henry Browne, S .J., The Catholic Evidence Movement {London, 1921), p. 60. 19. Distributism is fully discussed in chapter 6. 20. ''Aspects ofDistributism," The Newman, vol. 4, no. l (January 1969): 4. From the Patrick Cahill Collection, Burns Library, Boston College. 2i. Ibid., p. 4. 22. �oted in Peter d'A. Jones, The Christian Socialist Revival, I87; I9I4 {Princeton, N.J. , 1968), p. 12. 23 . See Barbara P. Petri, The Historical Thought ofJ -J -B. Buchez (Washington, D.C., 1958). 24. K. S. Inglis, Churches and the Working Classes in Victorian England {London, 1963), p. 2I. In other words, as Peter d'A. Jones put it, "aliena tion was a two-way relationship" (Jones, Christian Socialist Revival, p. 79) . 25. Maurice Reckitt, Maurice to Temple {London, 1947), p. l5I. 26. Jones, Christian Socialist Revival, p. 45. 27. See Conrad Noel, Autobiography {London, 1945), p. 57. 28 . See }. A. Hobson, Imperialism (London, 1902) . 29. �oted in Andre Maurois, Prophets and Poets (New York, 1935), p. 193· 30. G. K. Chesterton, What ls Wrong with the World (New York, 1910), P· 105· JI. Maurice Evans, Chesterton (Cambridge, England, 1939), p. 49. 32. Conrad Noel, Socialism in Church History {London, 1910), p. 257. 33 . G. K. Chesterton, The Autobiography oJ G. K Chesterton {New York, 1936), pp. 16/169. 34. Church Socialist 1, no. 2 {February 1912): 4. See also Noel, Social ism in Church History, p. 272. 35. See Noel, Autobiography, pp. 28-29. 36. See P. E. T. Widdrington, "The History of the Church Socialist League II," Commonwealth, no. 7, July 1927. 37. No single intellectual or political circle could claim Chesterton as exclusively its own, yet he seemed to share the platform with a variety of Christian Socialist Leaguers more regularly than with people from other organizations during the pre-World War I years.
412 Notes to Pages 96-99
38. G. K. Chesterton, Heretics (London, 1905), p. 36. 39. G. K. Chesterton, Orthodoxy (London, 1908), p. 12. 40. Ibid., P· IO. 41. Ibid., p. 45. Chesterton here touched on one of the most salient features of Catholic social theory adumbrated in the teachings of Pope Leo XIII and more formally set down in Pope Pius Xi's Quadragesimo Anno and Pope John XXIII's Mater et Magistra and Pacem in Terris as well as Vatican II's Gaudium et Spes. This is the principle of subsidiarity. In addi tion to recognizing that the individual and the family precede the state, subsidiarity affirms that governments and larger organizations should never undertake activities that are better suited to either individuals or smaller social associations. 42. From The Speaker, 1900, as quoted in D. J. Dooley, "Chesterton in Debate with Blatchford: The Development of a Controversialist," paper delivered at Seattle Pacific University, June 1987. 43. Margaret Canovan, G. K Chesterton (New York, 1977), p. 29. 44. G. K. Chesterton, The Everlasting Man (New York, 1925), p. 269. 45. This comes from a notebook of Chesterton's to which Leo Hetz ler made reference in his "Chesterton's Political Views, 1892-1914," The Chesterton Review, vol. 8, no. 2 (Spring 1981): 122-123. 46. Ibid., pp. 123 and 137. 47. G. K. Chesterton, "The Apology of the Partisan," Daily News, 21 October 1905. 48. Sidney Webb, Fabian Essays (London, 1889), p. 58. 49. From Sidney Webb, A Stratified Democracy, p. 5, in Anthony W. Wright, "Fabianism and Guild Socialism: Two Views ofDemocracy," Inter national Review ofSocial History, vol. 23 (1978), part 2, p. 230. The Webbs' social ideal became the Soviet Union. In 1935, after a visit to Russia where they saw Stalinism in action, the Webbs published two exuberant volumes on the Soviet system hailing it as the dawn of a new civilization. 50. This is an observation made by George Orwell in The Road to Wigan Pier (London, 1937), p. 180. It is interesting to note that Orwell's criticism of socialism and the faith that he placed in the common man were remarkably similar to those of Chesterton. Indeed, Orwell and Chesterton were fellow spirits in many crucial respects. For more on Orwell and Chesterton see the concluding chapter of this book. 51. From Shaw, Fabian Essays in Socialism, p. n9, as quoted in Alex Zwerdling, Orwell and the Left (New Haven, Conn., 1974), p. 34. 52. From Wells, New Worldsfar Old, p. 261, as quoted in Zwerdling, Orwell and the Left, p. 35·
Notes to Pages 99-105 413
53. As quoted in F. A. Hayek, The Road to Serfdom (Chicago, 1944) , p. 143. 54. G. K. Chesterton, ''A Gap in English Education," The Speaker, 4 May 1901. 55. Hilaire Belloc, The Cruise ofthe Nona (London, 1925), p. 48. 56. Belloc to Lady Frances Phipps, 24 October 1936, Box 363, Personal Letters "P," Belloc Papers, Burns Library, Boston College. 57. "Position of English Catholicism Contrasted with 50 Years Ago," written for the Jubilee number of the Catholic Herald, n.d., Box 9 MSS, Belloc Papers, Burns Library. 58. Belloc to Lady Phipps, 28 April 1936, Personal Letters, 1935-36, 581-B, Belloc Papers, Burns Library. 59. E. S. Purcell, The Life ofCardinal Manning (London, 1896), vol. 2, p. 630, as cited in A. N . Wilson, Hilaire Belloc: A Biography (New York, 1984), p. 24. 60. Belloc said that he became interested in national politics "from the moment I could think on public affairs at all-say from 12 to 14 years old. As to why I so began it was because it was a tradition in my English family. . . . for three hundred years, they having been . . . Nonconformist yeomen from the 17th century." Belloc's response to an inquiry by J. C . Wedgewood, Personal Letters "V," "W," and " Z " 1936, Box 363, Belloc Papers, Burns Library. 61. Manning was about the only person whom Belloc admitted had influenced his politics. Certainly, he said, there were no books that did. My political views, wrote Belloc, "are due to the natural action of the human conscience in the presence of any morally repulsive thing, such as the corruption of our professional politicians" (ibid.). 62. Belloc, Cruise ofthe Nona, p. 170. 63. Ibid., p. 172. 64. Hilaire Belloc, "The Liberal Tradition," in Essays in Liberalism, Hilaire Belloc et al. (London, 1897), p. 7. 65. See Robert Speaight, "The European Mind: Hilaire Belloc's Thought and Writings," Times Literary Supplement, 21 May 1954, p. 322. 66. Marie Belloc Lowndes, Where Love and Friendship Dwelt (New York, 1943), P· 59· 67. Belloc to Goodwin, 4 May 1932, Box 331, Correspondence "G," Belloc Papers, Burns Library. 68. Ibid. 69. Belloc to Hoffman Nickerson, 15 January 1931, "Belloc/Nickerson Correspondence," Hoffman Nickerson Papers, Burns Library.
414 Notes to Pages w6-111 70 . For an elaboration on these connections see John P. McCarthy, "Hilaire Belloc: Jacobite and Jacobin," The Chesterton Review, May 1986, pp. 165-17J. 71. See John P. McCarthy, Hilaire Belloc: Edwardian Radical (Indi anapolis, Ind., 1978). 72. Belloc to Nickerson, 3 November 1931, "Belloc/Nickerson Corre spondence," Hoffman Nickerson Papers, Burns Library. 73 . See Belloc's A Shorter History ofEngland (London, 1934) . 74. Douglas Woodruff, "Hilaire Belloc: His Life and Work, An Outline of Activities and Achievements," The Tablet, 25 July 1953, p. 79. 75. Hilaire Belloc, The French Revolution (London, 1911), p. 133. 76. Hilaire Belloc, Danton (London, 1899), p. IO. 77. In the 1927 introduction to Robespierre, after he had become dis illusioned with Parliament, Belloc apologized for his failure to point out more clearly the problems with representative government in the book's first edition. 78. Hilaire Belloc, Napoleon (London, 1932), p. 16. 79. Belloc to Van den Hout, 17 September 1936, Personal Letters, "V," "W," and "Z" 1936, Box 363, Belloc Papers, Burns Library. 80. Douglas Woodruff, Broadcast on Belloc for the BBC, 27 March 1949, Woodruff Papers, Box 17, Folder 13, Special Collections, Georgetown University. 81. Upon completing his book on Napoleon, Belloc wrote Hoffman Nickerson that he really had no love for it: this "was hack work done to order because Lippincotts . . . offered me my year's income for it." Belloc to Nickerson, 14 December 1932, "Belloc/Nickerson Correspondence," Hoffman Nickerson Papers, Burns Library. Belloc confessed to Nicker son that he wrote more than he should and did so too quickly. See Belloc to Nickerson, 26 March 1931, "Belloc/Nickerson Correspondence," Hoff man Nickerson Papers, Burns Library. 82. Belloc to Nickerson, 20 December 1932, "Belloc/Nickerson Cor respondence," Hoffman Nickerson Papers, Burns Library. 83. Belloc was boycotted by the Harmsworth publishing empire. See A. J. P. Taylor, Beaverbrook (New York, 1972), p. 229. 84. Belloc to Nickerson, 6 February 1932, "BellodNickerson Corre spondence," Hoffman Nickerson Papers, Burns Library. 85. See Belloc to Lady Phipps, 17 September 1936, Box 363, Personal Letters, "P" 1936, Belloc Papers, Burns Library. 86. A claim made by Arnold Lunn, And Yet So New (New York, 1958), p. 65. For an opposing view see Rev. Philip Hughes, "Mr. Belloc's Reviewer
Notes to Pages rn-u6 415
Replies," Clergy Review, April 1935, pp. 31/322. Lunn asserts that Belloc was a careful researcher who simply refused to flaunt his scholarship by copious footnotes. This was part of his errant contempt for academic con vention-after all, it had rejected him. 87. When asked by Father Philip Hughes why he refused to give ref erences, Belloc replied: "I am not a historian. I am a publicist." From Lunn, Yet So New, p. 79. For a Catholic assessment ofBelloc as historian see Patrick McGrath, "Catholic Historians and the Reformation-II," Blackfriars, vol. r4 (April 1963): 156-163. 88. Belloc to Gordon Smith, 8 July 1936, Box 363, Personal Letter "S," Belloc Papers, Burns Library. 89. Typed notes on a talk with historian Harold Fisher, n.d., Arnold Lunn Papers, Box 2, Folder 14, Special Collections, Georgetown University. 90. Belloc, Danton, p. 37. 91. Hilaire Belloc, A Companion to Mr. Wells' 'Outline ofHistory' (San Francisco, 1927), p. 4. 92. Qyoted by Hilaire Belloc to J. C. Wedgewood, n.d., p. 3, Personal Letters "V," "W," "Z" Box 363, 1936, Belloc Papers, Burns Library. 93 . C. Creighton Mandell and Edward Shanks, Hilaire Belloc: The Man and His Work (London, 1916), introduction. 94. Hilaire Belloc, The Place ofPeasantry in Modern Civilization (Man chester, England, 1910), pp. 279-280. 9 5. Belloc to J. C. Wedgewood, n.d., p. 1, Personal Letters "V," "W," "Z" 1936, Box 363, Belloc Papers, Burns Library. This was Belloc's reply to a questionnaire sent by J. C. Wedgewood, head of the Committee on House of Commons Records, on 7 July 1936, asking him to respond to a series of inquiries concerning his political views and experiences in Par liament. In his usual fashion, Belloc's replies had a sharp edge of sarcasm to them, and he prefaced his letter to Wedgewood by stating that they would not be of much use "save as a comic turn." Yet Belloc's candor revealed some interesting insights into what he remembered about his par liamentary career. 96. Ibid., p. 2. 97. Hilaire Belloc, "The Eye Witness," Weekly Review, 29 October 1939. 98. Parliamentary Debates (Commons), 4th series, 152 (22 February 1906): 614, from John McCarthy, Hilaire Belloc: Edwardian Radical, p. 103 . 99. For example, see the series o f articles Belloc wrote fo r the New Age concerning E. D. Moral and the Congo Reform Association: 7 and 21 December 19or, 6 August 1908. The events described in these articles seem
416 Notes to Pages n6-121
to have provided the material for the novel Emmanuel Burden, one of Bel loc's many stories that focused on the corruption of party politics by secret monied interests. The symbol of these new forces was "Peabody Yid," the Jewish political kingmaker who pulled wires behind the scenes in several of Belloc's novels. roo. In the final analysis Belloc failed to appreciate the fact that after the 19ro election Asquith's government had a substantially reduced majority, that at this point only a small number of radical Liberals desired to destroy the upper chamber, and that the new monarch was deeply opposed to Asquith's plan for flooding the House of Lords with five hun dred new peers. IOI. McCarthy, Hilaire Be/foe: Edwardian Radical, p. 152. ro2. Wilson, Hilaire Belloc, p. 171. ro3 . Belloc to Wedgewood, n.d., p. 2, Personal Letters "V," "W," "Z" 1936, Box 363, Belloc Papers, Burns Library. ro4. Belloc to Lady Phipps, 1 April 1938, Box 359, Personal Letters from Hilaire Belloc "1938," Belloc Papers, Burns Library. In this same let ter Belloc told Lady Phipps that he only sat for a second term in Com mons in order to rebuff a certain rich political leader, a swindler with a purchased peerage, who threatened Belloc because of his defense of the poor. "I went through another election in order to teach him manners. He was so frightened that he bolted at once to the House of Lords. He was in the soap business and had plantations in the tropics." ro5. "Talking of bad sherry, you know where the Devil would go ifhe lost his tail? He would go to the bar of the House of Commons, where bad spirits are re-tailed." Belloc to Oriana Haynes, 20 May 1931, Personal Let ters, Belloc Papers, Burns Library. ro6. Belloc to Nickerson, 21 June 1922, "Belloc/Nickerson Corre spondence," Hoffman Nickerson Papers, Burns Library. Chapter 5. Against the Servile State 1. Stanley Pierson, British Socialists: theJourneyfrom Fantasy to Poli tics (Cambridge, Mass., 1979), p. 186. 2. "Notes of the Week," New Age, 29 February 1908. 3. Chesterton's sense of the true objectives of socialism were mark edly similar to those articulated by George Orwell in his book The Road to Wigan Pier (London, 1937), p. 214. 4- Cecil Chesterton, Party and People (London, 19ro), pp. 171-172. 5. Ibid., p. xx. Cecil had called for a "popular Caesarism" as early as 1905 in G/adstonian Ghosts (London, 1905), p. 230.
Notes to Pages 121-124 417
6. Cecil praised the Marxist Social Democratic Party, for example, because, though sectarian, its members were good ":fighters" and had a solid doctrinal foundation necessary for battle (Party and People, p. 182) . He also appreciated Victor Grayson, for Grayson had the power to move and inspire great masses of men (Party and People, p. 185) . 7. Cecil Chesterton and Hilaire Belloc, The Party System (London, 1911), pp. 33-34. 8. Belloc, "The Party System," n.d., Box 9 MSS, Belloc Papers, Burns Library, Boston College. 9. Ibid., p. 158. 10. Although this chapter focuses on trade union sentiment, a variety of other people were voicing similar criticisms. Libertarians, such as George Howell, the working-class member of Parliament, had long argued that state regulation was against the true interests of the laboring man (see F. M. Leventhal, Respectable Radical· George Howell and Victorian Working Class Politics [Cambridge, Mass., 1971] ) . A pluralist critique of statism was developed by F. W. Maitland and J. N. Figgis. The pluralists emphasized the importance of protecting the freedom of smaller groups within the state and vehemently opposed the centralization tendencies of socialism (see David Nichols, The Pluralist State [New York, 1973]). On the political right, certain conservatives also objected to the growth of state power. This was best expressed by Hugh Cecil and the anti-socialist writer W. M. Mallock. Conservative anti-parliamentary sentiment was also rep resented by the followers of Lord Milner and the so-called "Round Table"
group, which included several "protectionist" elements from within the Tory Party. These people developed some rather elitist notions of gov ernment that were highly critical of the dilatoriness of parliamentary processes and the party system. 11. See G. R. Askwith, Industrial Problems and Disputes (London, 1920) . Belloc made a similar argument, though he thought it possible that the rapid influx of South African gold onto the world market at the end of the Boer War-an increase of more than 30 percent by 1910-was largely responsible for the increase in prices. This rapid increase in supply was greater than the world's commercial systems could absorb. As gold accumulated, prices went up and the real value of wages fell (see Hilaire Belloc, "The Unrest of This Year," sent to the Manchester Daily Dispatch, 17 October 1910, MSS, Box 9, Belloc Papers, Burns Library) . 12. See, for example, the Daily Mail, May 1912; Sir Arthur Clay, Syndicalism and Labour (London, 1912); and Margaret Cole, "Labour Research," in Margaret Cole, ed., The Webbs and Their Work (New York, 1974).
418
Notes to Pages 124-133
13 . See, for example, James Ramsay MacDonald, The Social Unrest: Its Causes and Solution (London, 1913), and Philip Snowden, Socialism and Syndicalism (London, 1913). 14. See R. P. Arnot, The Miners: Years of Struggle (London, 1948). A similar position is taken by K. 0. Morgan, "The New Liberalism and the Challenge of Labour: the Welsh Experience, 1885-1929," in Kenneth D. Brown, ed. , Essays in Anti-Labour History (London, 1974) . 15. See Henry Pelling, ed. , Popular Politics and Society in Late Victo rian England (London, 1968), pp. 155-162. 16. R. J. Holton, " Syndicalism and Its Impact in Britain with Par ticular Reference to Merseyside, 1910-1914," D. Phil. thesis, Sussex Uni versity, 1973, pp. 212-214. Holton's work was published as a book entitled British Syndicalism, I900-I9I4: Myths and Realities (London, 1976). 17- Ibid., pp. 222-223 . 18. Ralph Miliband, Parliamentary Socialism: A Study in the Politics of Labour (London, 1961), p. 2. 19. Ibid., p. 2. 20. Roger Moore, The Emergence ofthe Labour Party I800-I924 (Lon don, 1978), p. 114. 21. Walter Kendall, The Revolutionary Movement in Britain I900-I92I (London, 1969), p. 37. 22. R. J. Holton, "Syndicalism," p. 124. 23 . See "The Smart Philosophy," Daily Herald, 9 January 1923. 24. For Mann's syndicalist views see Tom Mann's Memoirs (London, 1923) and the July 1911 edition of The Syndicalist. 25. Speech at Holborn Hall. Reported in the Daily Herald, 18 July 1912. 26. Guy Bowman, " Syndicalist Realities," Daily Herald, 4 November 1912. 27. See The Syndicalist, March 1911 and January 1912. 28. Pierson, British Socialists, p. 266. 29. Ibid. , p. 269. 30. Robert Williams, "The Greater Unionism II," Daily Herald, 19 March 1913. 31. See R. W. Postgate, The Builders' History (London, 1923). 32. Arthur Marwick, CliffordAllen, the Open Conspirator (Edinburgh, 1964) , p. 16. 33 . John P. McCarthy, Hilaire Belloc: Edwardian Radical (Indi anapolis, Ind., 1978), p. 254. 34. R. W. Postgate, The Lift ofGeorge Lansbury (London, 1951), p. 138. 35. G.R.S .T., "Reflections," Daily Herald, 29 June 1912.
Notes to Pages 133-141 41 9
36. Hilaire Belloc, "The Point of the Herald," Daily Herald, 15 April 1913 . For additional insight into the cross-fertilization of ideas among those who wrote for the Herald, see R. J. Holton, "Daily Herald vs. Daily Citizen, 1912-1915,'' International Review ofSocial History (1974). Holton is one of the few labor historians who has written on the importance of Dis tributist thinking for the labor Left. 37. G .R.S.T. , "Reflections," Daily Herald, 29 June 1912. 38. G.R.S.T., "Reflections," Daily Herald, 27 August 1912. 39. G.R. S .T., "Reflections," Daily Herald, 4 September 1912. 40. Leonard Hall, "The Servile State,'' Daily Herald, 8 November 1912. 41. S. T. Glass, The Responsible Society: The Ideas ofthe English Guild Socialists (London, 1966), p. 26. 42. Qyoted in Donald Thatcher, Nietzsche in England I890-I9I4: The Growth ofa Republican (Toronto, 1970), p. 229. 43. New Age, 26 May 19rn. 44. See "Notes of the Week," New Age, 25 August 19rn. 45. Belloc to ESP Haynes, 29 December 1913, Belloc Papers, Burns Library. 46. Tom Mann, "Why I Am a Rebel," Daily Herald, 15 April 1913. 47- S . G. Hobson, Pilgrim to the Left: Memoirs of a Modern Revolu tionist (London, 1938), p. 149. 48. For more details see A. R. Orage, ed., The National Guilds (Lon don, 1919), and the New Age articles on Guild Socialism commencing in April 1 9 12. 49. Orage had recommended Cole to Belloc, who was chagrined to discover that the young Turk was a "peace crank." It seems that in Bel loc's mind his allies generally had flaws: "The instruments to one's hand always turn out to be lunatics or thieves and in general people who have nothing to lose or no sense of proportion" (Belloc to H . A. L. Fisher, 2 November 1915, Belloc Papers, Burns Library). 50. The first type of syndicalism to make its appearance in Britain, via the Scottish dissidents in the Social Democratic Federation known as the "impossibilists," was that associated with an American Marxist with anar chist tendencies, Daniel DeLeon. DeLeon championed industrial action by the workers along the lines of relentless class warfare, de-emphasizing political reform. 51. For a good discussion of the similarities and differences between Cole's version of Guild Socialism and that articulated by Hobson, see A. W. Wright, G. D. H. Cole and Socialist Democracy (Oxford, 1979), pp. 40-43; L. P. Carpender, G. D. H. Cole: An Intellectual Biography
420 Notes to Pages 1 41-148
(Cambridge, England, 1973), pp. 24-26; Stanley Pierson, British Socialists: Thejourneyfrom Fantasy to Politics (Cambridge, Mass., 1979), pp. 212-213; C. Bechofer and Maurice Reckitt, The Meaning of the National Guilds (London, 1918); A. R. Orage, ed. , The National Guilds (London, 1919); and G. D. H. Cole, The World ofLabour (London, 1913). 52. For a discussion of the differences between the New Age and Dis tributist ideas, see Jay P. Corrin, "The Formation of the Distributist Cir cle," The Chesterton Review, vol. 1, no. 2 (Spring-Summer 1975), and G. K Chesterton and Hilaire Be/foe: The Battle against Modernity (Athens, Ohio, 1981), pp. 84-88. 53 . A. J. Penty, Post-Industrialism (London, 1922), pp. 98-99. 54. Hilaire Belloc, ''An Examination of the National Guild System," VIII, New Age, 4 December 1913. 55. See "Will the Bill Do?" Eye- Witness, 22 June 1911. 56. Junius, "Open Letter to a Trade-Union Official," Eye- Witness, 6 June 1912. 57. "Two Strikes: 1889-1911," Eye- Witness, 17 August 1911. 58. Belloc, "Honest and Dishonest Insurance," Eye- Witness, 6 June 1911. See also "The Fraud of the Poll Tax," Daily Herald, 24 November 1913. 59. See Box L, 1,2,3,4, Belloc Papers, Burns Library. 60. See letters from Belloc to Watson, 1 2 October 1914, and Watson to Belloc, 16 October 1913, Box L, nos. 1,2,3,4, Belloc Papers, Burns Library. 61. "Anti-Insurance Act Committee," Box 6 , nos. 1,2,3,4, Belloc Papers, Burns Library. 62. Ibid. 63 . For example, see "The Present Industrial Dispute," sent to the Daily Dispatch, 15 September 1910, M S S Box 9, Belloc Papers, Burns Library. The editor in this case had asked Belloc's opinion on the London Boilermakers' Lockout. 64. See Belloc, "The Unrest of this Year," Manchester Daily Dispatch, sent on 17 October 1910, MSS Box 9, Belloc Papers, Burns Library. 65. Belloc, "The English Railway Strike," sent to Movement Social de November, n.d., MSS Box 9, Belloc Papers, Burns Library. 66. Ibid. 6J. "Crisis in Trade Unionism," Eye- Witness, 8 February 1912. 68. This issue was one of many reasons why the CSG under the lead ership of Henry Somerville refused to support the programs of Belloc, G. K. Chesterton, and the Distributists. 69. Hilaire Belloc, "On the Minimum Wage and the Servile State," sent to the Catholic Times, 27 December 1913, MSS Box 7, Belloc Papers, Burns Library.
Notes to Pages 148-156 421
70. Ibid. 7r. See Belloc, "Proportional Representation," sent to Academy, 3 April l9n, and "The Best Proposal (?) or a Real Reform (?) or True Represen tation (?)," sent to the Daily Dispatch, l March l9n, MSS Box 9, Belloc Papers, Burns Library. See also Belloc, article sent to The Sunday Chronicle, 12 January 1914, MSS Box 7, Belloc Papers, Burns Library. 72. Hilaire Belloc, "On Payment of Members," sent to the New Age on 20 October 1910, MSS Box 9, Belloc Papers, Burns Library. 73. Belloc, however, seems to have given up on Parliament altogether by this juncture. In December 1912, Belloc in the New Witness asked Lans bury why he even bothered to run for Parliament, since in his mind noth ing of merit could be accomplished there. Lansbury answered Belloc in the Daily Herald, arguing that Parliament might eventually respond to the control of the people through the creation of mechanisms for popular ini tiative, referendum, and the recall. (See Lansbury, "Parliament's Uses," Daily Herald, 20 December 1912.) 74. "The Strike and the Vote," Eye- Witness, 27 June 1912. 75. See Belloc article sent to the Sunday Chronicle, 12 January 1914, MSS Box 7, Belloc Papers, Burns Library. 76. Belloc, "The Present Situation in France," sent to The New Weekly, 18 April 1914, MSS Box 7, Belloc Papers, Burns Library. 77. See article sent to the Sunday Chronicle, 12 January 1914, and "The Osborne Judgement," n.d., MSS Box 9, Belloc Papers, Burns Library. 78 . Belloc to Haynes, 26 October 1912. Haynes complained about Cecil's rudeness and inept management and regretted ever having prom ised any money to the New Witness. See his letter to Belloc, 19 December 1912. For Belloc's criticisms of Cecil's journalism see letters to E. S. P. Haynes, 12 October 1912; 2 May 1913; and 3 December 1913, Belloc Papers, Burns Library. 79. See G. K Chestertons Autobiography (New York, 1936), pp. 205-206. S o . R.J. Holton, "Syndicalism and Its Impact in Britain," pp. 566-567.
Chapter 6. Distributism and British Politics l. For a full discussion of how Distributist economic theory contrasts with contemporary economic thinking, see Gerald Alonzo Smith, "Dis tributism and Conventional Economic Theory," The Chesterton Review, vol. 5, no. 2 (Spri ng 1979). 2. G. K. Chesterton, The Autobiography of G. K Chesterton (New York, 1936), p. 232.
422 Notes to Pages 15 6-159
3 . It had no official connections with the Church, and non-Catho lics wrote for the paper and were members of the Distributist League. In fact, Charles Dokin, a prominent man in the League's Central Branch, and Archie Currie, a regular contributor to the weekly who signed his material ''A.gag," were atheists. (See Lyle Dorest interview with Brocard Sewell, pp. 23 and 34, Wheaton College, Special Collections.) 4. Dudley Barker, G. K Chesterton (London, 1973), p. 26. 5. See K. S. Inglis, Churches and the Working Classes in Victorian England (London, 1963), p. 26. 6. See A. J. Penty, Old Worlds For New (London, 1917) . 7 . Ever true t o his love o f the old, Penty preferred the medieval spelling of guild. 8. A. ]. Penty, Towards a Christian Sociology (London, 1923), p. 45. For a clearer understanding of how Penty merged his thinking with the ideas of Chesterton see his Distributism:A Manifesto (London, 1937) . 9 . Maurice Reckitt, G. K Chesterton: A Christian Prophetfar England Today (London, 1950), p. 9 . r o . For example, P. E. T. Widdrington, leader o f the Church Social ist League, helped fashion a program against party politics and examined new ways to bring a Christian sociology to industrial society that paral leled work on the subject being done by the Chester-Belloc papers. (See the League's journals during these years: The Commonwealth and the Church Socialist Quarterly.) In fact, it can be argued that Reckitt and his Angli can friends represented the purest form of Distributist social thinking in the interwar years. As editor of the Anglican Christendom, Reckitt man aged to attract important German Catholic liturgical reformers to write for his magazine, such as Father H. A. Reinhold and Waldemar Gurian. The Catholic writer Bernard Wall, editor of the influential journal Colos seum, admitted that the Christendom group was "exceedingly good-on many social questions perhaps more to the mind of the Church than most Catholic reviews" (Box "Correspondence, W-File," letter from Bernard Wall to H. A. Reinhold, n.d., H. A. Reinhold Papers, Burns Library, Boston College). n. Eric Gill, Money and Morals (London, 1934), pp. 21-22. 12. Gill and other Distributists gained the reputation of being unre alistic medievalists and machine breakers. (See Donald Attwater, A Cell of Good Living: The Lift and Opinions ofEric Gill [London, 1969] , pp. 145-146. See also Gill's ItAll Goes Together [London, 1944] , a compilation ofhis ideas on industrial society and how to improve it; Eric Gill: Autobiography [New York, 1971] ; and Robert Speaight, The Lift ofEric Gill [New York, 1966] .)
Notes to Pages 15 9-164 423
13. Brocard Sewell, "Father Vincent McNabb," TheAylesford Review, Summer 1988, p. 9 . For more on Father McNabb see The Chesterton Re view, February and May 1996, a special commemorative issue. 14. See Ferdinand Valentine, Father Vincent McNabb, O.P. (West minster, Md., 1955), p. 172. 15. From a letter written on a turnleaf of a discarded exercise book, Attwater, Cell of Good Living, p. 59. 16. See Belloc's letters to Hoffman Nickerson, 29 November 1925 and 3 May 1926, "Belloc/Nickerson Correspondence," Hoffman Nickerson Collection, Burns Library, Boston College. 17. Much of the work on the paper was done gratis, though Chester ton himself put substantial sums of his own money into the project-as much as five thousand pounds-to keep the operation going. (See Dud ley Barker, G. K Chesterton, p. 266.) Gregory Macdonald recalled that the total weekly payroll of G.K s Weekly was about eight pounds, and of this his brother, Edward, received about four pounds weekly for his efforts as editor (Gregory Macdonald, "Forty Years After: A Note by Gregory Mac donald," unpublished memoirs, 1974, Gregory Macdonald Papers, Wade Collection, Wheaton College, Wheaton, Illinois) . 18. See Lyle Dorsett interview with Gregory Macdonald, 19 July 1985, p. 5, Wade Collection, Wheaton College. Gregory Macdonald claimed that his brother kept in touch with Chesterton on a regular basis by tele phone and that it was by such means that the paper was brought out on a weekly basis. Throughout these years the Macdonald brothers seem to have had an intimate working relationship with Chesterton. Gregory, for example, claimed that he and his brother were the only ones who knew that Chesterton was dying in 1936, and that they were told just before Mrs. Chesterton wrote to Gilbert's confessor, Father John O'Connor (Gregory Macdonald, "Forty Years After," pp. l and 9, Wade Collection, Wheaton College) . 19. Lyle Dorsett interview with Brocard Sewell, 25 April 1985, p. 5 , Wade Collection, Wheaton College. 20. Gregory Macdonald, "Forty Years After," p. 6, Gregory Macdon ald Papers, Wade Collection, Wheaton College. 21. G. K. Chesterton, "Straws in the Wind: The Mystery of Mus solini," G.K s Weekly, 24 April 1926. 22. G. K. Chesterton, "Straws in the Wind: Representative Govern ment," G.K s Weekly, 17 April 1926. 23. G. K. Chesterton, "Straws in the Wind: Wages and Profits," G.K s Weekly, 24 April 1926.
424 Notes to Pages 164-170
24. See B . D. Acland, "Distributism in Industry," G.K s Weekly, 27 February 1926. 25. "The Great Lockout," G.K s Weekly, 8 May 1926. 26. See "Notes," G.K s Weekly, 5 June 1926. 27. The Tablet, 15 March 1926, p. 639. 28. Ibid., pp. 638-639. 29. "The League Against the Poor," G.K s Weekly, 15 May 1926. 30. For Macdonald's strong disagreements with my own assessment of the politics of Chesterton's paper, see ''And Now the Pink Legend: A Response to Jay P. Corrin," The Chesterton Review, Fall-Winter 1976-77. 31. Ibid., p. 7. 32. See Dorsett interview with Macdonald, p. 3 , Wade Collection, Wheaton College. 33. See his "Forty Years After," Wade Collection, Wheaton College. 34. Maurice Reckitt, The World and the Faith (London, 1954), p. 58. 35. In fact Chesterton claimed personal responsibility for all unsigned copy in his journal. (See G.K s Weekly, August 1925, p. 476 , and A. Her bold, "Chesterton and G.Ks Weekly, " Ph.D. diss., Department of English, University of Michigan, 1963, p. 39.) 36. See G. K. Chesterton, "The Pride of England," G.K s Weekly, 22 May 1926. 37. G. K. Chesterton, "Straws in the Wind: Our Critics: Trusts and Trades Unions," G.K s Weekly, 10 April 1926. 38. Gregory Macdonald, "Pink Legend," The Chesterton Review, Fall Winter 1976-77, p. 9 . 39. G. K . Chesterton, "The Pride o f England," G.K s Weekly, 22 May 1926. 40. Ibid. 41. See "Distributism and the Mines," Parts I and II, G.K s Weekly, 7 April and 14 April 1928. 42. For example, see Patrick Braybrooke, Some Thoughts on Hilaire Belloc (London, 1923); the writings of Henry Somerville, leader of the Catholic Social Guild and editor of the Christian Democrat during the 1920s; Wilfrid Sheed, The Morning After: Essays and Reviews (New York, 1972); and Michael Mason, "Chesterbelloc," in G. K Chesterton: A Half Century of Views, ed. D. J. Conlon (New York, 1987) . Two of Chesterton's biographers, Maisie Ward and Dudley Barker, also have been critical of Chesterton's political obsessions. 43. It should be pointed out that Belloc had emphasized that the Irish problem was a key factor in destroying the House of Commons. Along with increased suffrage, the advent of the secret ballot, and "the genius" of
Notes to Pages 170-175 4 25
Irish political organization in the appearance of a united Irish party, the party system, which up until the mid-nineteenth century had an aristocratic spirit and a certain elasticity to it, became "infected with a mechanical dis cipline" imposed by the new oligarchs. This is what undermined the inde pendence of individual MPs. Irish obstructionism (singled out for praise by Cecil Chesterton), employed as a political tool for winning national independence, forced the oligarchs to defend themselves, and they did so by enforcing a new discipline on parliamentary debates and individual voting, making the whole process nothing more than a sham, mere window dress ing to preserve the impression that what an MP said and did really mattered. This, of course, is why Belloc was muzzled once he entered Parliament. (See Hilaire Belloc, A Shorter History efEngland [London, 1934] , pp. 585-587.) 44. Keith Burgess, The Challenge efLabour: Shaping British Society, I850-I930 (New York, 1980), p. 248. 45. Qyoted in Keith Middlemas, Politics in Industrial Society: The Experience efthe British System since I9II (London, 1979), p. 213. 46. Ibid., p. 22. 47. For example, see the 3 January 1931 issue of G.K s Weekly. 48 . A similar tendency was identified in American politics after World War II. See C. Wright Mills, The Power Elite (New York, 1956). 49 . G. K. Chesterton, "The Respectable Radicals," G.K s Weekly, 22 February 1930. 50. Ibid. Ironically, the Chesterton-Belloc analysis of the Mond Turner talks dovetailed with that of the leading English Marxist of the day, Mr. R. Palme Dutt. In the Labour Monthly Dutt pointed out that if the trade unionists accepted the Mond-Turner proposals it would mark their conversion "from organs of class struggle into organs of co-operation in the capitalist organisation ofindustry" (as cited in "Notes of the Month," The Commonwealth, September 1928) . 5i. An aristocracy he defined as a governing class accepted by the community as a natural organ of control (Hilaire Belloc, "The Crown and the Breakdown of Parliament," submitted to the English Review, Janu ary 1934, MSS Box 7, Belloc Papers, Burns Library, Boston College). 52. Hilaire Belloc, The House ef Commons and Monarchy (London, 1920), p. 95. 53. Hilaire Belloc, A Shorter History efEngland (London, 1934), p. 6!9. 54. Belloc, House if Commons and Monarchy, p. 184. 55. Hilaire Belloc, "Were We Wrong?" II, G. K s Weekly, 5 Novem ber 1932. 56. G. K. Chesterton, "The First Reply to Fascism," G.K s Weekly, 29 August 1935·
4 26 Notes to Pages IJ6-r77
Chapter 7. The New Distributists
1. As noted by Robert Speaight. "It is no disparagement ofJerrold's considerable abilities," wrote Speaight, "to suggest that here he had not much competition." Speaight believed that Belloc and Christopher Daw son had decisive influences on Jerrold's ideas. But Jerrold took too much from Belloc, a more brilliant yet less erudite and balanced guide than Daw son. Speaight thought it an exaggeration to labelJerrold a fascist, although he was so obsessed with the problems ofindustrial capitalism and the cor ruption of parliamentary democracy that he became indulgent to fascism wherever it reared its head ( The Property Basket: Recollections ofa Divided Life [London, 1970] , p. 155). 2. Arnold Lunn, Now I See (London, 1956), p. 55. 3. Before converting to Catholicism, Arnold Lunn in June 1929 began a lengthy correspondence with Belloc concerning religion that ran on for many years. These letters chronicle Lunn's reasons for eventually embrac ing the faith, especially the role Belloc's apologetics played in the matter: "You and Chesterton have been the two biggest influences in my life since, as a undergraduate, I read your Path To Rome and Orthodoxy . To you and to him I owe, under God, my faith" (Arnold Lunn to Hilaire Belloc, 26 June 1936, Box 2, Folder 14, Arnold Lunn Papers, Special Collections, Georgetown University). Lunn's family, especially his father, Henry Lunn, had strong reserva tions about this conversion and disapproved of his son's subsequent, single minded devotion to militant apologetics. (See Henry Lunn to Arnold Lunn, 18 November 1937, Box 5, Folder 10, Douglas Woodruff Papers, Special Collections, Georgetown University.) Arnold Lunn's brother, Hugh Kingmill, shared their father's concerns. He hoped that Arnold would not spend the rest of his life in controversy, especially since he was not following the best of paths to wisdom: "Chesterton is not the man he was"-i.e., since converting to Catholicism-"and no one can escape the warping effects of always arguing" (Kingmill to Lunn, 6 December 1933, Box 3, Folder 15, Arnold Lunn Papers, Special Collections, Georgetown University) . 4. See Duke of Alba to Arnold Lunn, 21 September 1937, Box 2, Folder 13, Arnold Lunn Papers, Georgetown University. 5. During a visit to America Lunn apparently engineered a riot in the winter of 1938 while addressing a crowd on the Spanish Civil War, where, as he put it, "Jewish faces predominated" (the new Distributists also tended to absorb Belloc's unfortunate anti-Semitic proclivities). "What I
Notes to Pages 177-178 4 27
helped to provoke was a flavour of the kind of mob fury which has burnt the churches and murdered the priests in Red Spain," but the real purpose of this behavior was to develop a :fighting esprit de corps among the young Catholics. The press reported the rage Lunn unleashed as "sad and shame ful," but Lunn commented that the episode was mild compared to any meeting in Glasgow (Arnold Lunn to unidentified recipient, 5 Decem ber 1938, Box 3, Folder 20, Arnold Lunn Papers, Georgetown University) . 6. See "The Douglas Woodruff Papers: A Register," prepared by Anna T. Zakarija, Douglas Woodruff Papers, Georgetown University, and an essay by Auberon Waugh on Woodruff for the Dictionary ofNational Biography which appears in the Woodruff Papers, Box 7, Folder 25. Bel loc was also appreciative ofWoodruff's important contributions to Catho lic journalism: "The Tablet gets better every week and I rejoice in it! It is the only Review which has a knowledge of foreign affairs and I read it avidly" (Belloc to Woodruff, 30 May 1940, Box 1, Folder 14, Woodruff Papers, Georgetown University). Michael Derrick believed that Woodruff made the Tablet as influential and respectable as the Spectator, the Econo mist, and the New Statesman ("An Editorial Jubilee: Profile of Douglas Woodruff," 23 May 1961, Box 16, Folder 19, p. 2, Woodruff Papers, George town University) . In his later years Woodruff received many honors as a guiding light of English Catholicism, the most notable being the Grand Cross of the Order of St. Gregory the Great (1968) . He was a close friend of Pope Paul VI before his election as pontiff and was acquainted with many high-ranking Vatican ecclesiastics. 7. Derrick, ''An Editorial Jubilee: Profile of Douglas Woodruff," 23 May 1961, p. 6, Box 16, Folder 19, Douglas Woodruff Papers, Special Col lections, Georgetown University. 8 . Belloc to Hoffman Nickerson, 30 December 1933, "Belloc/Nick erson Correspondence," Hoffman Nickerson Papers, Burns Library, Boston College. 9. See Lunn to Belloc, 13 December 1933, Box 2, Folder 14, Arnold Lunn Papers, Georgetown University. I O . Ibid. 11. Arnold Lunn, Come What May (London, 1940), p. 75. 12. Douglas Jerrold, "Hilaire Belloc and the Counter-Revolution," in Douglas Woodruff, ed., For Hilaire Belloc: Essays in Honor ofHis 7Ist Birth day (New York, 1942), p. 5. 13 . "Half a dozen sufficient reputations could be shared out and thankfully received if the authorship of his works could be transferred to writers less generously endowed. But this profusion of talent was offset by the extremely uncongenial environment in which he had to display his
428
Notes to Pages 179-183
gifts" (Broadcast on Belloc for the BBC, 27 March 1949, Box 17, Folder 13, Douglas Woodruff Papers, Georgetown University). 14. For example, when Lunn was engaged by Father John F. O'Hara, president of the University of Notre Dame, as an assistant professor of apologetics, a title he did not much like because of its modern defensive tone, he said that the subject he most desired to teach, indeed the only thing that really mattered, was "the threat of communism." Lunn hoped to trace the whole movement historically beginning with the French Revo lution through a century of liberalism to Russia and Spain, the last of which, he claimed, Catholics know too little about (Arnold Lunn to Father O'Hara, 9 April 1937, Arnold Lunn Correspondence, 1935-37, UP, OH, Box 69, File 27, Archives, University of Notre Dame) . 15. Douglas Jerrold, "Comments," The English Review, January 1933· 16. Douglas Jerrold, "Comments,'' English Review, December 1933 · 17. For Vogelsang, see chapter I. 18. Douglas Jerrold, "English Political Thought and the Post-War Crisis," American Review, May 1933, p. 178. 19. These included, it seems, less the problem of ideas than a fetch ing physical appearance. See Douglas Woodruff's unpublished memoirs, p. 42, Part II, Box 14, Folder I, Douglas Woodruff Papers, Georgetown University. 20. For Woodruff's views on the Syllabus of Errors, see "Pope and Church," n.d., Box 15, Folder 9, Douglas Woodruff Papers, Georgetown University. 2I. Douglas Woodruff, "Manuscripts, Notes," pp. IO, n, 12, undated, Box 14, Folder 9, Douglas Woodruff Papers, Georgetown University. 22. Arnold Lunn to Douglas Woodruff, n.d., "Confidential,'' Box 5, Folder IO, Douglas Woodruff Papers, Georgetown University. 23. For a detailed analysis of this topic see Jay P. Corrin, G. K Chester ton and Hilaire Belloc: The Battle against Modernity (Athens, Ohio, 1981), pp. 125-136. 24. "The Distributist League," G.K s Weekly, 13 December 1930. 25. H. E. Humphries, Liberty and Property: An Introduction to Dis tributism (London, 1928), pp. 12-13. 26. Chesterton's first major biographer, Maisie Ward, wrote to Doug las Woodruff that Father Ignatius Rice and James Walsh, who served Chesterton's cause as members of the Distributist League, told her that Chesterton did not want Distributists to do anything practical and that it was largely his doing that the Central Branch made so little effort to carry their principles into practice. What he asked of them was to be amus-
Notes to Pages 183-188 429
ing and convivial (Maisie Ward to Douglas Woodruff, 29 December 1949, Box 6, Folder 34, Douglas Woodruff Papers, Georgetown University) . 27. For example, see Jay P. Corrin, G. K Chesterton and Hilaire Belloc, chapter 8, "The Influence of the Distributist Idea," and Dermot Qyinn, "Distributism as Movement and Ideal," The Chesterton Review, vol. 19, no. 2 (May 1993). 28. Gill set up a highly-regarded craft guild where workers lived with their families in a self-sufficient, loosely knit commune guided by the reli gious principles of St. Thomas and the philosophy of Distributism. 29. G. K. Chesterton, "How Are You Going to Do It?" G.K s Weekly, r October 1927. 30. G. K. Chesterton, The Outline ofSanity (New York, 1927), p. 246. 3r. Michael Derrick, "Distributism and Primitivism," Black.friars, April 1934. For more on the activities of the Distributist League and its various branches during these years see Michael Thorn, "Filling a Gap in the Distributist Record: 1930-1936," The Chesterton Review, vol. 24, no. 3 (August 1998). 32. Hilaire Belloc, An Essay on the Restoration ofProperty (London, 1936), p. II. 33. Belloc to J. Stafford Johnson, 22 October 1932, Box 374-F, File 1932 "C," Belloc Papers, Burns Library. 34. Hilaire Belloc, The Crisis of Our Civilization (New York, 1937) , p. 214. 35. Ibid. , p. 235. Belloc did not insist that reform demanded conver sion of everyone to the Catholic Church; rather, it depended on the exis tence of"Catholic culture," a condition in which the governing, economic, and social institutions were motivated by the Catholic spirit. 36. Belloc to Nickerson, 22 June 1936, Box 54, Letters 1935-36, "M,N,O," Belloc Papers, Burns Library. 37- Letter to Mrs. Reginald Balfour, 28 June 1922, in Robert Speaight, ed., Lettersfrom Hilaire Belloc (London, 1958), p. 122. Chapter 8. The Appeal of Fascism r. See J. R. Jones, "England," in Hans Rogger and Eugen Weber, eds., The European Right: A Historical Profile (Berkeley, Cali£ , 1966); Alas tair Hamilton, The Appeal ofFascism (New York, 197r); John P. Diggens, ''American Catholics and Italian Fascism," Journal of Contemporary His tory, vol. 2 (1967), and his Mussolini and Fascism: The View from America (Princeton, N.J., 1972) .
430 Notes to Pages 189-194
2. See E. Barker, Political Thought in England (London, 1915), p. 223. 3 . See David Nicholls, Three Varieties of Pluralism (New York, 1974) , p. 6. 4. This is noted by Anthony W. Wright, "Guild Socialism Revis ited," Journal of Contemporary History, vol. 9 (1974), p. 167. 5. One could include in these ranks John Neville Figgis, G. D. H. Cole, Mandell Creighton, F. W. Maitland, Harold Laski, Chesterton, Bel loc, and others. 6. From David Nicholls, The Pluralist State (New York, 1975), p. 3. 7. This position, of course, is similar to that taken by the Catholic personalist philosophers. 8 . John Neville Figgis, Churches in the Modern State (London, 1913). p. 47. 9. Nicholls, Three Varieties ofPluralism, p. 54. 10. A. J. Penty, "Communism and Fascism," Part II, American Review, October 1936, p. 495. n. G. K. Chesterton, The Resurrection ofRome (London, 1930), p. 263. 12. G. K. Chesterton, "On the One-Party System," in Avowals and Denials (London, 1934), p. 149· 13 · G. K. Chesterton, The Well and the Shallows (New York, 1935), pp. 60-61. 14. The tendency to paint Chesterton with the brush of philo-fascism continues. Even those who admire the man have given credence to this mistaken legacy. For example, Michael Thorne, writing an appreciation of the Distributist League in the 1930s, associates Chesterton with Belloc and Gregory Macdonald, a major contributor to G. K s Weekly, as the "most prominent and persistent" advocates of the Fascist cause ("Filling a Gap in the Distributist Record: 1930-1936," The Chesterton Review, vol. 24, no. 3 [August 1998] : 313-314) . Kevin L. Morris, who has written one of the most insightful analyses of Catholics and Fascism to date, also overlooks Chesterton's condemna tion of Fascism on pluralistic grounds. Morris writes that Chesterton appears to have followed Belloc in matters concerning Fascism but with slightly less enthusiasm. On balance, avers Morris, "Chesterton seems to have said more in favour of Fascism than against it." At best, he claims, Chesterton's attitude was ambivalent, and he failed to pursue its denun ciation ("Fascism and British Catholic Writers, 1924-1939,'' The Chester ton Review, vol. 25, nos. l and 2 [February/May 1999] : 6). 15. See ''A Socratic Symposium-III," G.K s Weekly, 25 July 1935· 16. Hilaire Belloc, "Mussolini and the Guild," Weekly Review, 15 June 1939·
Notes to Pages 19 4-196 431
17. "The Return of Caesar," G.K s Weekly, 27 July 1933, as reprinted in The Chesterton Review, vol. 25, nos. l and 2 (February/May 1999): 18-19. 18. From Robert Skidelsky, Oswald Mosley (New York, 1975), p. 17. This is the interpretation of Henry A. Turner as developed in his "Fascism and Modernization," World Politics, June 1972. Richard Thurlow, in Fas cism in Britain: A History, I9I8-I985 (London, 1987), also emphasizes the continuity between the pre-1914 political right (notably Milner, Cham berlain, and the Unionist "Die-hards" who voted against the Parliament Act in the House of Lords in l9II and who were strongly opposed to mili tant trade unionism) and British fascism. Thurlow, however, fails to note the significance of the Chesterton-Belloc group's leftist, syndicalist sym pathies during these years and mistakenly links them with the Right. It is important to appreciate that it was not simply the Right that believed in political and economic conspiracies. Barbara S. Farr's The Development and Impact ofRight- Wing Politics in Britain, I903-I932 (New York, 1987) argues that a main source of British fascism was the right-wing political inspiration surrounding the new imperialism that came out of the Boer War. The major post-World War I events that stimulated right-wing and fascist organizations were the gen eral strike threats of 1920 and 1921. 19. For example, see Colin Holmes, Anti-Semitism in British Society, I876-I939 (New York, 1979); Thurlow, Fascism in Britain and Kenneth Lunn, "Political Anti-Semitism before 1914: Fascism's Heritage?" in K. Lunn and R. Thurlow, eds. British Fascism (London, 1980). Richard Griffiths in his Fellow Travellers ofthe Right (London, 1983) considers the Chesterton-Belloc group to have been one of the main sources of British anti-Semitism. He argues that their positions owed much to the French Right, especially the theories of Le Play. Griffith's The Reactionary Right (London, 1966) provides a good discussion of the ideas of the French Right which can be compared to the programs and thinking of the Distributists. 20. K. Lunn, "Political Anti-Semitism," p. 28. 2r. See Norman Cohn, Warrantfar Genocide (Chico, Cali£ , 1981), for an examination of the impact of the Protocols on England, pp. 151-156. 22. See letters from Father Coughlin to Belloc, beginning in Janu ary 1938, Box I, Belloc Papers, Burns Library, Boston College. Belloc con tracted to write fifty-two articles-not less than a thousand words each, for the total sum of one thousand pounds-for the Socialjustice Review on the world's social and economic problems. The first appeared on 31 Janu ary 1938. This contract ended after the twenty-sixth article, when Cough lin claimed that the American depression cut deeply into his operating budget and the paper could no longer afford such expense.
432
Notes to Pages 191200
23. Father Hogan charged that the real purpose of communism was to destroy Christianity, and that the effort was engineered by a clique of Jews who worked through a satanic organization called "Illuminized Freemasonry." See Catholic Worker, January 1939· 24. See "Priest Lashes Anti-Semitic Article," Catholic Worker, Janu ary 1939. 25. See "Father Coughlin," Parts I and II, n.d., Box 8; Folder l, Shus ter Archives, University of Notre Dame. At this time Coughlin was also taken on by Commonweal. 26. Ibid., Part II, p. 2. For important information on the Coughlin movement's activities beyond New York see Philip Jenkins, Hoods and Shirts: The Extreme Right in Pennsylvania, I92s-I950 (Chapel Hill, N.C., 1997) , and Kenneth ]. Heineman, ''A Catholic New Deal: Religion and Labor in 1930s Pittsburgh," Pennsylvania Magazine ofHistory and Biog raphy n8 (1994) : 363-394. 27. See Norman Thomas to George Shuster, 25 July 1939, Box 5; File 17, 1939, Shuster Archives, University of Notre Dame. 28. See New Age, 7 December and 21 December 1907; 8 August 1908. 29. James Joli, The Anarchists (New York, 1964), p. 234. 30. See Stanley G. Payne, Spanish Catholicism: an Historical Overview (Madison, Wis. , 1984), p. 133· Payne believes that the rioters were primarily inspired by the anticlericalism of the Radical Republican party led by Ale j andro Lerroux rather than by anarchists, who at this point had little influence on Barcelona's working classes. 3r. An examination ofthe events surrounding the Semana Tragica can be found in Joan Connelly Ullman, The Tragic Week: A Study ofAnticleri calism in Spain I875-I9I2 (Cambridge, Mass., 1968). Irrespective of the question of Ferrer's culpability (the evidence Ullman provides shows that Ferrer was innocent of the charges), the sheer magnitude of the popular explosion against the establishment could never be explained by the work of one man (p. 298) . 32. There were a number of possible explanations for the Radicals' decision to exclusively target Church property, most ofwhich relate to the party's endeavors to create alliances with military elements within the gov ernment and to undermine Catalan separatist efforts. In fact, a compelling theory for the action is that the Radicals used anticlerical violence as a safety valve to diffuse tensions that had built up in Spanish society and that they could no longer control effectively. For more on this see Ullman, Tragic Week, chapter 15. 33. This analysis (replicated in Belloc's later assessment of the Span ish Civil War) overlooks the resentments that had led to similar anti-
Notes to Pages 201-203 433
clerical outbursts in 1835, 1868, and 1873 . Another more astute and objec tive English historian of Spain correctly identified the problem. In his book on the Spanish Civil War, Hugh Thomas noted that the Spanish workers had a long and deep resentment of the clergy. They attacked churchmen, he wrote, "because they thought them hypocrites and because they seemed to give a false spiritual front to middle-class or upper-class tyranny'' (Hugh Thomas, The Spanish Civil War [New York, 1963], p. 175). As Guenter Lewy has observed, the thesis that the violence against the Spanish Church was caused primarily by anticlericalism rather than hatred of religion can be seen from the fact that Protestant chapels in Madrid, Valencia, and other cities were not touched during the outbreak of the Spanish Civil War in 1936. Indeed, one mob in Barcelona that had set fire to a Protestant church quickly extinguished the blaze once the rioters real ized their error (Guenter Lewy, Religion and Revolution [New York, 1974] , citingJohn David Hughey, Jr., Religious Freedom in Spain: Its Ebb and Flow [London, 1955] , p. 133). 34. "The International: V: The Motive Force," submitted to the Dublin Review, April 1910, Belloc Papers, Burns Library. 35. "The International: I: The Ferrer Case," submitted to the Dublin Review, January 1910, Belloc Papers, Burns Library. 36. It is interesting to note that the many international demonstra tions for Ferrer also convinced the young Francisco Franco and his cadet classmates that the Semana Tragica, with its tones of anti-militarism, anti clericalism, and Catalan separatism, was the product of an international
conspiracy of Freemasons. Such events, claims a recent Franco biographer, must have been deeply resented by the impressionable young cadet and probably were "burnt deep into his consciousness." (See Paul Preston, Franco: A Biography [New York, 1994] , p. 12.) 37. Ullman, Tragic Week, p. 315. 38. Despite Barcelona's importance as a seaport and the fact that many Frenchmen and Italians labored in her textile factories, almost all those arrested were of Spanish origin. 39. The workers identified the religious orders as close allies with capitalists and raged against what one of their leaders called the "existence of the plutocratic-clerical trusts" which "sucks up the blood of the work ers and absorbs all wealth produced by labor" (Ullman, Tragic Week, p. 328. See also pp. 284-287) . 40. Cecil Chesterton, "The Wrath of Mr. Wells," New Witness, 27 July 1916. For more on the Marconi affair see Frances Donaldson, The Marconi Scandal (London, 1962) . 41. Cecil Chesterton, "For the Defense," Eye- Witness, 4 July 1912.
434
Notes to Pages 204-209
42. See New Witness, January 1913 . 43 . Belloc t o Haynes, 26 August 1913, Box 1, Belloc Papers, Burns Library. 44. Hans Rogger and Eugen Weber, eds. , quoting Brasillach in The European Right, p. 108. 45. Belloc to Baring, 25 March 1939, Letters to and/or from Belloc, 1939, Correspondence "B," Box 374-F, Belloc Papers, Burns Library. 46 . F. H. O'Donnell, New Witness, 12 February 1914. 47. F. H. O'Donnell, Eye- Witness, 28 March 1912. 48. F. H. O'Donnell, New Witness, 2 July 1914. "Le Juif de L'Epoque" was the title of a French anti-Semitic book. 49. Belloc to Maurice Baring, 31 August 1916, in Robert Speaight ed. , Lettersfrom Hilaire Belloc, p. J3. 50. Belloc to E. S. P. Haynes, 13 December 1913, Box 1, Belloc Papers, Burns Library. 51. See Bernard Wasserstein, Herbert Samuel· A Political Lift (Oxford, 1992), pp. 134-146. 52. F. H. O'Connell, New Witness, 9 October 1913 . 53 . From David Low, Autobiography ofDavid Low (London, 1956), p. 133, as quoted in Holmes, p. 102. 5 4 . Carter contributed to a series in the New Witness entitled "What shall we do with the Jews?" See New Witness, 25 September 1913. Her posi tion on separating Jews from everyone else was the policy eventually advo cated by the New Witness. 55. New Witness, 4 October 1918. 56. Kenneth Lunn, "Political Anti-Semitism before 1914: Fascism's Heritage?" p. 31, in Lunn and Thurlow, eds., British Fascism. 57. See Ibid., p. 34. 58. Hilaire Belloc, The fews (Boston, 1922), p. 174. 59. The "worst peril of all," Belloc wrote Hoffman Nickerson, was that no Jew, however intelligent, "has any conception of either the immi nence of the peril, or of the causes ofit." The Jews, he predicted, were des tined for terrible suffering (Belloc to Nickerson, 21 June 1922, "Belloc/ Nickerson Correspondence," Hoffman Nickerson Papers, Burns Library). 60. See interview with Belloc in the American Hebrew and]ewish Tri bune, 20 December 1935, MSS Box 7, 2 of 2, Belloc Papers, Burns Library. 61. Hilaire Belloc, "Portugal," p. 328, 22 July 1937, "Papers of G . K. Chesterton," Hoffman Nickerson Papers, Burns Library. 62. The commentary got Belloc entangled in legal troubles, for Nesta Webster threatened prosecution for libel. See Belloc's biographer's mem-
Notes to Page 210 43 5
airs, Robert Speaight, The Property Basket: Recollections ofa Divided Life (London, 1970), p. 373. 63 . Mussolini appreciated the support. In a personal audience with some American Catholics in the summer of 1935, 11 Duce singled out both Belloc and Chesterton for their supreme reputation as Catholic writers. In his efforts to gain Italian-American backing for the Fascist regime, Mussolini had made assurances that he worked for the good and peace of Italians everywhere. The first principle for any political action, he insisted, had to be religious, and that was why Belloc and Chesterton achieved greatness: Ci dice a gl'Italiani di rimanere tranquilli perche io lavoror per il bene e per la pace di tutta l'ltalia in qualunque cost. Ci dice agli uomini di essere uomini di buona religione, perche l'uomo senza religione non puo mai andare avanti. Considerate Belloc e Chesterton, i due gran scrittori lnglesi. Laro non potovavno mai arrivare alla grandezza della loro gloria se primo non avevano vista la luce della vera fede. (Letter from Father William Rowan to Hilaire Belloc, IO September 1935, 581-B, Correspondence "R" 1935-36, Bel loc Papers, Burns Library) Father William H. Rowan wrote Belloc to inform him of Mussolini's statement, which was given to two of Rowan's friends who visited 11 Duce
in Rome. Belloc responded by saying that he was indeed most honored and delighted to hear praise from such an important governing quarter, the transcript of which he would keep as a most precious memorial (Bel loc to Father William H. Rowan, 23 September 1935, 581-B, Correspon dence "R" 1935-36, Belloc Papers, Burns Library). 64. Postcards and letters from Belloc to his wife while doing research for The Path to Rome, 24 June 1901, Box 2, Folder 14, Lunn Papers, Spe cial Collections, Georgetown University. 65. Belloc to Nickerson, 7 May 1932, "Belloc/Nickerson Correspon dence," Hoffman Nickerson Papers, Burns Library. 66. Unlike Belloc, G. K. Chesterton was far more critical of Mus solini's foreign policy. For example, see "Notes of the Week," G.K s Weekly, 9 November 1929, a critical commentary on Mussolini's belligerence toward Belgrade and his aspirations of turning the Adriatic into an Ital ian lake: as a European Mussolini "is not entitled to preach a policy of national aggrandizement unless the safety of ltaly is endangered."
43 6
Notes to Pages 211-214
67. See Hilaire Belloc, "The Truce," G.K s Weekly, 9 November 1929. 68. Hilaire Belloc, "The Two Monarchies," Weekly Review, 25 August 1938. 69. "Notes," Weekly Review, 8 September 1938. 70. Hilaire Belloc, "Mussolini and the Guild," Weekly Review, 15 June 1939· 71. This essay appears to mark a shift in Belloc's thinking about Mussolini's heavy-handed methods. A year earlier, for example, he had written to his daughter Elizabeth that Mussolini had done wonders by re organizing the guild system, but that there was no necessity for such des potism. A guild system "could arise quite naturally in a free society." This letter underscores the difficulty B elloc had criticizing Mussolini in the public forum. It was important, at all costs, to keep a tribal united front against the enemies of the faith. (See Belloc to Elizabeth, 21 April 1938, Box l , Belloc Papers, Burns Library.) 72. Belloc to W. W. Blair-Fish, 27 October 1939, B ox L16, Corre spondence 1938-39, Belloc Papers, Burns Library. Belloc had mixed feel ings about what he said concerning Mussolini in print. For instance, the personal sufferings of his friend, Max Beerbohm, gave him pause in his seemingly uncritical endorsement ofll Duce. Official anti-Semitism had forced Beerbohm as an old man to leave his family estate at Rapallo. This,
wrote Belloc to Baring, was yet another example of the "injustice and folly" of the anti-Jewish policy in Italy. At least the Germans had an excuse for what they had done. (See Belloc to B aring, 25 March 1939, Box 374-F, Letters to and/or from Hilaire Belloc, 1939 Correspondence "B," Belloc Papers, Burns Library.) 73. Belloc to Baring, 21 March 1939, Box 374-F, Letters to and/or from Hilaire Belloc, 1939 Correspondence "B," Belloc Papers, Burns Library. 74. G. K. Chesterton, "Abyssinia," G.K s Weekly, 18 January 1935· 75. This was said by Geoffrey Davies, who claimed Chesterton would not have approved of the Distributist drift into the fascist camp. (See ''At the Devereux," G.K s Weekly, n February 1937.) 76. Belloc to Chesterton, 29 November 1935, G. K. Chesterton Cor respondence / B elloc, 1931-40, Wade Collection, Wheaton College, Wheaton, Illinois. 77. Hilaire Belloc, "Masonry and Italy," G.K s Weekly, 26 December 1935· 78. Belloc to his son, 5 August 1935, Box l, B elloc Papers, Burns Library. 79. Belloc to Father Holland, l May 1936, 581-B, Letters 1935--:36, "H," Belloc Papers, Burns Library.
Notes to Pages 21 4-216 43 7
80. Belloc to his son, 5 August 1935, Box 1, Belloc Papers, Burns Library. 8I. G.K s Weekly, u June 1936. Chesterton wrote here that he hoped to write further on this subject in the next issue, but by that time he was dead. 82. See Donald Attwater, "English Catholic Fascists?" Commonweal, 10 January 1941, pp. 296-302. Attwater informed his friend Father H. A. Reinhold that this article got him into serious trouble with several lead ing conservative English Catholics (Attwater to H. A. Reinhold, 5 March 1946, Correspondence "Austin-Attwater-Auden," Number 8, H. A. Rein hold Papers, Burns Library, Boston College) . In this essay Attwater had described a "Latinophile" attitude, pro duced largely by Hilaire Belloc, which created the impression that Italy and France could do no wrong because they were rooted in Catholic cul ture. Attwater was commenting on a group of writers who had fallen under the sway of such attitudes and who had thereby created a fascist image for English Catholics in the American press. Generally, he wrote, the Latinophiles pushed for closer political cooperation between Britain and Mussolini and excused Italy's imperialism on the grounds that she was anti-communist and was forced into Abyssinia by the "folly of sanctions." The group also had a preoccupation with communist conspiracies (they blamed the fall of France on the "Reds," i.e., the Popular Front, and regarded Franco as a defender of Christianity against communism), and believed that Europe was dominated by a combination of bankers, secret
societies (Freemasons), and Jews. For a vigorous criticism of my own analysis of this group and the role of G.K s Weekly in the Abyss�nian affair, see Gregory Macdonald, "And Now the Pink Legend: A Response to Jay P. Corrin," The Chesterton Review, vol. 3, no. 1 (Fall-Winter 1976-77); Lewis Filewood, " 'Fascism' and the Weekly Review: a Response to Gregory Macdonald and Jay P. Cor rin, The Chesterton Review, vol. 3, no. 1 (Fall-Winter 1976-77); and Gregory Macdonald, "Forty Years After: A Note by Gregory Macdonald," unpub lished memoirs, 1974, Wade Collection, Wheaton College. 83. Gregory Macdonald, "Memoirs," p. 8, Wade Collection, Wheaton College. 84. See C. F. Hammond, "Financial Armageddon, Second Phase," G.K s Weekly, 24 October 1935, and G. Macdonald, "Looking On," G.K s Weekly, 17 October 1935. 85. This was put forward by Douglas Jerrold in The Necessity ofFree dom (London, 1938), pp. 249-250. It was also Oswald Mosley's position. See Colin Cross, The Fascists in Britain (London, 196!) . Perhaps the most
43 8
Notes to Pages 216-218
strident proponent of Mussolini and Fascism along lines similar to Bel loc's came from the English Catholic writer James Strachey Barnes, who became a member (honoris causa) of the Italian National Fascist Party. Barnes claimed to have played the role of chronicler and prophet for the Fascist Revolution. See the autobiographical account of his work for Mus solini, Halfa Life Left (New York, 1937), and his Fascism (London, 1934). 86. Thomas M. Coffey, Lion by the Tail (London, 1974), p. 307, as cited in Morris, "Fascism and British Catholic Writers, 1924-1929," p. 42. 87. For more see Evelyn Waugh, Waugh in Abyssinia (London, 1936). 88. Brocard Sewell said that there was a right and left faction in the Distributist movement at the time (he considered himself a man of the right) and that both Chesterton and Belloc represented the center. How ever, Belloc's private correspondence and what he wrote in the public domain bely this notion. Belloc not only sympathized with the right-wing Distributists, he was, as Donald Attwater correctly surmised, the very fountainhead of the Latinophile mentality. On the other hand, Sewell's memory serves him well in that Belloc, as opposed to Sewell himself, Her bert Shove, and a number of other Distributists, did not directly embrace the ideas of Mosley and the British Union of Fascists. (See Lyle W. Dorsett's interview with Brocard Sewell, 25 April 1985, Wade Collection, Wheaton College.)
89. G. K. Chesterton, "The Relapse," G.K s Weekly, 4 June 1936. 90. Chesterton to Reckitt, 19 September 1935, in Maisie Ward, G. K Chesterton (New York, 1943), p. 548. 91. Archie Currie, "Cockpit," G.K s Weekly, 12 September 1935· 92. See G. K. Chesterton, "Which Is the Herring," G.K s Weekly, 19 September 1935· 93. G. K. Chesterton, "The Disaster," G.K s Weekly, 10 October 1935· 94. Conrad Bonacina, "Cockpit," G.K s Weekly, 26 September 1935· 95. Many of Chesterton's friends believed his lack of fire over Ab yssinia was influenced by an intense commitment to Catholicism, which, as was always the case with Belloc, would have clouded his judgment. (See Mrs. Cecil Chesterton, The Chestertons (London, 1941), p. 298; Frank A. Lea, The White Knight ofBattersea: G. K Chesterton (London, 1946), p. 74; Jay P. Corrin, G. K Chesterton and Hilaire Belloc: The Battle against Moder nity (Athens, Ohio, 1981), pp. 210-2n; and Morris, "Fascism and British Catholic Writers, 1924-1939.") 96. Lyle Dorsett interview with Gregory Macdonald, pp. 6;, Wade Collection, Wheaton College. 97. Macdonald, "Memoirs," p. 7 ff. , Wade Collection, Wheaton College.
Notes to Pages 218-223 439
98. See Corrin, G. K Chesterton and Hilaire Belloc. 99. These included Jorian Jenks, A. K. Chesterton-the intellectual spark-plug of Mosley's British Union of Fascists and editor ofits two chief propaganda organs, Blackshirt and Action-and J. L. Benvenisti. rno. Maurice Reckitt, As It Happened (London, 1941), p. 185.
Chapter 9. Early Catholic Critics o f Fascism l . See Carlo Francesco Weiss, "Corporatism and the Italian Catho lic Movement," pp. 123-126, Ph.D. diss., Yale University, 1955· 2. QuadragesimoAnno, Article 95, in Oswald Von Nell-Breunning, S .J. , The Reorganization ofSocial Economy: The Social Encyclical Developed and Explained (New York, 1936), pp. 426-427. 3. Barbara Ward, "Planned Economy in Catholic Social Thought," Dublin Review, January 1939, p. 88. 4. Virgil Michel, Christian Social Reconstruction (Milwaukee, Wis., 1937) , pp. 98-99. 5. Ropke is one of the best examples of post-World War II efforts to amalgamate neoliberalism with Distributism. Ropke is considered the father of Germany's postwar economic recovery and had a major influence on similar programs undertaken in France and Italy. (See Jay P. Corrin, "The N eo-Distributism of Friedrich A. Hayek and Wilhelm Ropke," Thought, December 1988.) 6 . Another impediment to interpretative analysis of Fascist cor poratist ideas was the absence of patterned ideas to buttress its institutional structures. As Carlo Weiss has noted, Fascism was not an idea that had found some bayonets; it was not the embodiment of a creative principle, and it certainly was not, as Mussolini proclaimed, the "social content of the revolution." Fascism was rather "a de facto situation institutionalized." Its vital impulse was expressed through the actions of its charismatic leader, not through laws or institutions. That is why the only significant piece ofwriting on Fascism was Mussolini's own article in the Encyclope dia Italiana, which, of course, he actually did not write himself (Weiss, "Corporatism and the Italian Catholic Movement," p. 176). 7. Wilhelm Ropke, "Fascist Economics," Economica, vol. 2, no. 5 (February 1935): 87. 8. Ibid., p. 99. 9 . See D. A. Binchy, Church and State in Fascist Italy (London, 1941), p. 338. I O . Ibid., P· 340.
440 Notes to Pages 223-225 II. For details, see George Seldes, Sawdust Caesar (New York, 1935), p. 99. Thomas Bokenkotter also has a chapter on Sturzo and Fascism in
Church and Revolution: Catholics and the Strugglefor Democracy and Social Justice (New York, 1998). See chapter 9, "Don Sturzo (1871-1959) vs. Mus solini's Revolution." 12. See H. A. Reinhold, "Don Luigi Sturzo," 16 May 1943 , intended for Orate Fratres's "Timely Tracts," Box 1, "Manuscripts," Reinhold Papers, Burns Library, Boston College. Reinhold had a long relationship with Sturzo and his private papers contain many letters discussing the difficulties they both had trying to find support for their anti-fascist crusade among Catholics in America. 13 . In 1935 the Jesuit magazine America conducted a national plebi scite for the purpose of deciding who were the greatest forty living Catho lic authors. Those selected would be inducted into an Academy of the Gallery of Living Catholic Authors established at Webster College, Mis souri. Twenty-five places were allotted to foreign writers, and fifteen to those of the United States. Father Francis X. Talbot, S.J., editor ofAmerica, announced the results in October 1936. G. K. Chesterton ranked the high est, but since he had just died and was also deemed the greatest Catholic writer of the generation, a special status was created for him. At the top of the list of the most important living Catholic writers was Hilaire Belloc, surpassing the likes of Jacques Maritain and Paul Claudel (see America, 10 October 1936). 14. Qµoted in John N. Molony, The Emergence ofPolitical Catholicism in Italy (London, 1977), p. 13. Belloc may not have had much liking for Father Reinhold either. In a letter to a friend in September 1935, for instance, he made disparaging and facetious remarks about "a disquieting fellow named Reinhardt [sic]" who became dreadfully frightened when the Nazi party came to power and feared they would come over the Austrian border and kidnap him. "I am told that he has crawled back again." (File 581-B, Letters 1935-.J6 "H," Bel loc Papers, Burns Library, Boston College) . 15. See chapters IO and I I o n H. A . Reinhold's work and travails. 16. Interview with Dorothy Day by Dean Brackley and Dennis Dil lon, New York City, 28 January 1972, "Dorothy Day/Catholic Worker Barry" Papers, W-9 Box 1, Special Collections, Marquette University. 17. Sturzo's sociological views are most fully detailed in The Inner Laws of Society: A New Sociology (New York, 1943; first published in Ital ian, 1935). 18. Nicholas S. Timasheff, The Sociology ofLuigi Sturzo (Baltimore, 1962), pp. 6/68.
Notes to Pages 226-231 441
19. Luigi Sturzo, Church and State (New York, 1939), p. 479. 20. Luigi Sturzo, "Corporatism: Christian-Social, and Fascist," Catholic World, July 1937, pp. 398-399 . 2r. For a discussion of Sturzo's ideas on agrarian reform see Malcolm Moos, "Don Luigi Sturzo-Christian Democrat," American Political Sci ence Review 39 (April 1945): 269-292. Sturzo's views were very similar to the English Distributists with whom he corresponded. 22. Luigi Sturzo, Italy and Fascism (New York, 1945), p. 97. 23. Carl T. Schmidt, The Corporative State in Action: Italy under Fascism (London, 1939) , p. 44· 24. Ibid., p. 96. 25. Ibid., p. II2. 26. Other American Catholics also gave witness against Mussolini. Father James Cox, for example, had studied Italian Fascism firsthand in 1932. Upon returning to the United States he denounced the complete denigration of religious and political freedom under Mussolini. See "Father Cox Has a Closeup View of Mussolini," Christian Century 49 (27 July 1932), pp. 925-926, and John Hearley, Pope or Mussolini (New York, 1929), which also exposed for American Catholics the antidemocratic nature of Mussolini's regime. 2J. See Weiss, "Corporatism and the Italian Catholic Movement," pp. qo-17r. 28. Mussolini's hatred for religion was a product of primary sociali zation. His father had named him after Benito Juarez, the Mexican arch enemy of Church privilege. From his earliest youth, Mussolini had been steeped in an environment of intense anticlericalism. 29. John P. McKnight, "The Papacy and Fascism," from his The Pa pacy: a New Appraisal (London, 1952), as quoted in Charles F. Delzell, ed. , The Papacy and Totalitarianism between the Wars (New York, 1974), p. 23. 30. This is made clear in Count Caleazzo Ciano, The Ciano Diaries (Garden City, N.Y. , 1946). Although 11 Duce generally kept his contempt for the Church close to the vest for political purposes, any well-informed Catholic would have come across the well-documented occasions when he expressed hatred for that institution and everything it held sacred. 3r. For instance, the archbishop of Boston, Cardinal William O'Connell, who openly expressed admiration for 11 Duce and was highly suspicious of the Catholic Worker movement because he feared it might be crypto-communist, resisted efforts to involve his clergy in social action. After having spoken with the cardinal at length in Boston, Norman McKenna, editor of The Christian Front, told his friend Father Paul Fur fey that O'Connell did not grasp the situation confronting the American
442
Notes to Pages 231-232
working class, had very few substantive questions to ask concerning the activities of the Catholic Worker group, and "simply does not understand the purport of the latest encyclicals." (See McKenna to Furfey, 20 Decem ber 1935, "McKenna-Furfey Correspondence," Z-26, Virgil Michel Papers, St. John's University.) 32. For example, the most informed and perceptive analyses of the various fascist movements were written by Catholic liberals: Sturzo, Wal damer Gurian, H. A. Reinhold, and George Shuster, one-time editor of Commonweal. Their studies of Nazism and Italian Fascism have withstood the test of time and are supported by current scholarship on the subject. 33. Catholic publications and associations critical of Fascism from the outset included those of the American and British Dominicans, especially the latter's magazine Blac!efriars, Harold Robbins' The Cross and the Plough (a back-to-the-land English Distributist publication), the English Catho lic Social Guild and its publication, Christian Democracy, the Dublin Review when it was under the editorship of Christopher Dawson, and PAX, a journal of the British liturgists edited by Donald Attwater. In America, Dorothy Day's Catholic Worker was a leading opponent of Fascism, as was a related publication, Norman McKenna's The Christian Front. The Paulist monthly Catholic World, Commonweal, and Orate Fratres, the mouthpiece of the American liturgical movement started by the Distributist Benedic tine educator Virgil Michel, also assumed a highly critical stance con cerning Fascism. 34. See Richard Gribble, C . S . C . , Guardian ofAmerica: The Life of James Martin Gillis, C. S. P. (New York, 1998). An earlier biography is James F. Finley's fames Gillis, Paulis! (Garden City, N.Y. , 1958). The latter is a popular, straightforward and rather uncritical account of Gillis's life. Gribble's treatment is more scholarly, disinterested, and analytical. 35. When the Jesuit journal America finally published an anonymous article critical of Mussolini in March 1939-the fact that the author chose not to reveal his name suggests the chilling environment for Catholics critical of Fascism-Gillis remarked that for the first time he did not feel so isolated concerning his analysis of Mussolini. (See "Editorial Com ments," Catholic World, April 1939.) 36. "Editorial Comments," Catholic World, March 1926. 37. "Editorial Comments," Catholic World, December 1924. 38. See "Editorial Comments," Catholic World, February and Decem ber 1930. Father Gillis's concerns about such matters were shared by America's best-known Catholic social activist, the influential Father John A. Ryan. Note Ryan's criticism of Fascist statism in Declining Lib-
Notes to Pages 223-236 443
erty (New York, 1927) . Indeed, like many liberal Catholics, Ryan believed that the great danger to America came not from communism but from some source of fascism. (See letter to H. A. Reinhold, 14 January 1943, "R" Number 8, Reinhold Papers, Burns Library, Boston College.) Ryan appre ciated the danger of Father Charles Coughlin's movement in such light, and he, along with Gillis, became one of the radio priest's most outspo ken critics. (For the details surrounding Ryan's battles with Coughlin and his right-wing supporters with the Brooklyn Tablet, see John A. Ryan Papers, Boxes "Coughlin'' and "Ryan Writing, 1935-40," Special Collec tions, Catholic University of America.) 39. "Editorial Comments," Catholic World, August 1931. 40. "Editorial Comments," Catholic World, April 1939. 41. See "Editorial Comments," Catholic World, November 1935 and August 1936. 42. See Church and State, pp. 502-505. The Parisian Jesuit publication Les Etudes, La Vie Intelectuelle of the French Dominicans, Blackfriars, the Commonweal, and the Catholic Worker also supported this position. 43. "Editorial Comments," Catholic World, November 1935. 44. "Editorial Comments," Catholic Review, December 1935. 45. Richard Gribble, Guardian ofAmerica, p. 147. Gribble reveals that Frank Hall of the National Catholic Welfare Conference News Service received so many letters critical of Gillis's columns that he asked him to "shift to something less controversial." Gillis's harsh criticisms of Mus solini were unpopular both in Italy and with the Vatican. The Paulist
Superior General John Harney was informed that the Italian consulate in New York had placed the Paulist Fathers "and particularly Gillis" under observation. Moreover, the Secretary of the Sacred Congregation of Extra ordinary Ecclesiastical Affairs had also contacted the Paulists in Rome to complain about a Gillis Catholic World editorial and radio talk which had attacked Mussolini. (See Richard Gribble, Guardian ofAmerica, pp. 148 and 291.) 46. "Editorial Comments," Catholic World, July 1936.
Chapter rn. Social Catholicism and the Career of H. A. Reinhold 1. From an interview with Father William Leonard, S.J., of Boston College, an early participant in the American liturgical movement, Chest nut Hill, Mass. , 21 October 1990. Father Leonard was founder of Boston College's Liturgical Library Collection, "Liturgy and Life."
444
Notes to Pages 231239
2. John S. Kennedy, "Variations in Accomplishment," Hartford
Transcript, 26 January 1968. 3 . For more on the life and work of Romano Guardini {1885-1968) see Robert A. Krieg, C.S.C., ed. , Romano Guardini: Proclaiming the Sacred in a Modern World (Chicago, 1995). 4. �oted in Warren G . Bovee, "H.A. R., Front Line Fighter," Today, December 1954, p. 4. 5. The Nazis closed down the Catholic seamen's clubs in 1939. 6. H.A.R. to Oldmeadow, 18 September 1935, Box "Correspondence: T File," H. A. Reinhold Papers, Burns Library, Boston College. Reinhold always was cautious when writing about conditions in Ger many, such was his fear of the Gestapo. He frequently wrote articles under different names and refused to grant interviews, lest the Nazis hurt his family. For example, see H.A.R. to Frederic Kenkel, 27 August 1936, Box "Correspondence: Immigration and Naturalization File," Reinhold Papers, Burns Library. 7. H.A.R. to Father ?, 30 November 1935, B ox "Correspondence: W File," Reinhold Papers, Burns Library. Reinhold's analysis of Nazism appears to have been influenced by his contacts with the German Catho lic publicist Waldemar Gurian. As early as 1932 Gurian had equated Nazism and Bolshevism as secular religions. (See Um des Reiches Zukurift
[Freiburg, 1932] . Gurian wrote this book under the name of Walter Gerhart.) 8 . When the German bishops withdrew their prohibitions against the Nazi regime in the spring of 1933, many Catholics responded with great enthusiasm. Bertram pushed for lifting the ban on Nazism, fearing that failure to do so would lead to massive Catholic defections to the Protestant Church. {See Richard Rolfs, "The Role of Adolf Cardinal Bertram . . . in the Church's Struggle in the Third Reich," Ph.D. diss., University of California, Santa Barbara, 1976, p. 30.) 9 . Ludwig Volk, S .J. , Catholische Kirche und Nationalsozialismus (Mainz, 1987), p. 258. 10. See Guenter Lewy, The Catholic Church and Nazi Germany {New York, 1964), p. 316; Walter Adolph, Sie sind nicht Vergessen {Berlin, 1972), pp. 23-24; and Richard Rolfs, "The Role of Adolf Cardinal B ertram." Rolfs conducted numerous personal interviews with Father Adolph, a confidant of the bishop of Berlin, Konrad von Preysing. This bishop was a consistent opponent of the German episcopate's dealings with the Hitler regime, and Rolfs's interviews shed valuable light on the Church's rela tionship with the Nazis. See also Walter Adolph, GeheimeAuszeichnungen aus dem Nationalsozialistischen KirchenKampfI9JS-I945 (Mainz, 1979).
Notes to Pages 239-242 445
It is interesting to note that when Cesare Orsenigo was under fire by several German bishops in 1937, especially by Bishop Preysing, for being too sympathetic with the Nazis, Cardinal Bertram wrote a letter to the Vatican extolling the work of the papal nuncio and requesting that he be allowed to remain in Berlin (Adolph, Geheime Auszeichnungen aus dem Nationalsozialistischen KirchenKampf, p. 40) . n . See Volk, Katholische Kirche und Nationalsozialismus, pp. 251258. 12. For background on the Concordat see Stewart A. Stehlin, Weimar
and the "Vatican I9I9-I933: German- Vtztican Diplomatic Relations in the Inter war Years (Princeton, N.J., 1983), and John Zeender, "The Genesis of the German Concordat of 1933," in Nelson H. Minnich, Robert B. Eno, S.J., and Robert F. Trisco, eds., Studies in Catholic History in Honor ofJohn Tracy Ellis (Wilmington, Del., 1985), pp. 61/665. 13. See Adolph, Geheime Auszeichnungen aus dem Nationalsozialistis chen KirchenKampf, pp. 39-40. 14. Ernst-Wolfgang Bockenforde, "German Catholicism in 1933 ," trans. Raymond Schmandt, Cross Currents, vol. 2, no. 3 (Summer 1961): 289. 15. Lewy, The Catholic Church and Nazi Germany, pp. 172-17J. 16. H. A. Reinhold, The Autobiography ofFather Reinhold (New York, 1968), p. 81. 17. Appendix to letter of H.A.R. to Bishop W. Berning, S.T.D., of Osnabrock, Germany, Box "Correspondence: File B," Burns Library. Reinhold sent this letter to Berning on 15 April 1947, after the bishop had invited him to return to Germany.
18. Adolf Schuckelgruber (pen name of H.A.R.), "The Church in Germany," n.d., p. 294, Box 1, "Manuscripts," Burns Library. 19. Even Cardinal Michael von Faulhaber, Archbishop of Munich, and one of the most ardent critics of the Nazis and Cardinal Bertram's conciliatory policies toward the regime, could never be convinced that Hitler himself was the source of all the trouble. He was blinded from rec ognizing this evil, writes the historian Ludwig Volk, S .J., by Hitler's charisma and "statesmanlike aura" (Ludwig Volk, S.J. , "Lebensbild," in Andreas Kraus, ed., Acten Kardinal Michael von Faulhabers, vol. l: I9I/I945 [Mainz, 1978] , p. lxxiv). 20. Scrutator (pen name of H.A.R.), "The Catholic Church in Ger many and Nazi Persecution," n.d., p. 7, Box 1, "Manuscripts," Burns Library. 2r. The Church's response to National Socialism has been a subject of considerable controversy. Immediately after the war Johann Neuhausler published a two-volume, richly documented book, Kreuz und Hakenkreuz (Munich, 1946), showing that the German bishops had vigorously but unsuccessfully resisted Nazi rule. Neuhausler's view, buttressed by other
446 Notes to Page 242
books authored by Johanna Maria Lenz, Christus in Dachau ( Vienna, 1956), Konrad Hoffman, Zeugnis und Kampfdes deutschen Episkopats (Frei burg im Breisgau, 1946), Gerhard Ritter, The German Resistance: Carl Goerdeler's Struggle against Tyranny (London, 1958), and Hans Rothfels, The German Opposition to Hitler:AnAssessment (London, 1961), along with a spate ofbiographies on Catholic anti-Nazis, held sway through the early 1960s. For an American view along such lines, see Mary Alice Gallin's Ger man Resistance to Hitler: Ethical and Religious Factors (Washington, D.C., 1961). In the view of Gallin, "Catholic bishops offered straightforward and courageous opposition to the ideology and tactics of the Nazis" (p. 229). H. A. Reinhold, Walter Gurian, and a few emigre intellectuals took strong objection to the "Neuhausler thesis," though they constituted a distinct minority. Eventually a number of younger German revisionist historians and dissident journalists began to cast a more critical eye on the episcopal rela tionship with the Hitler regime. One of the first influential critiques of the Church's record was Ernst Bockenforde's article "Der Deutsche Katho lizismus im Jahre 1933," which appeared in the liberal Catholic journal Hoch/and in l960/6i. (The significance of this study was such that Ray mond Schmandt translated it for Cross Currents in the summer of 1961.) Bockenforde's argument essentially corroborated Reinhold's position,
namely, that the German bishops had not been solidly opposed to the National Socialists and that the signing of the Concordat in 1933 was a dis aster for the Church in that it made it impossible for the episcopate to lead Catholics in opposition to Hitler. Reinhold's prescient arguments were given further support by a number of other scholars, including Hans Miiler, "Zur Behandlung des Kirchen Kampfes im der Nachkriegsliter atur," Politische Studien 12 (July 1961), and Katholische Kirche und Nation alsozialismus (Munich, 1965) . For a good overview of this controversy see Richard Rolfs, "Adolf Cardinal Bertram," pp. 2-6. American scholars soon joined the fray. Gordon Zahn, for example, concluded that the average German Catholic had no desire to oppose the Nazis and that his religious leaders actually called upon him to support Hitler's wars. After rigorous investigation, Zahn learned of no more than seven Catholics who openly refused Nazi military service. (See his Ger man Catholics and Hitler's Wars [New York, 1962] , p. 54.) Zahn's arguments appear to have caused vexation in certain high Church circles. Zahn wrote H. A. Reinhold that the German hierarchy formally protested his research report. The president of Loyola University in Chicago was told that some "top-ranking prelate" in Rome was monitoring Zahn's work and might demand "redress." It appears that neither Zahn nor the president of Loy-
Notes to Pages 243-244 447
ola were intimidated by such pressures (Zahn to Reinhold, l March 1960, Box "Correspondence: File Z, Burns Library) . Perhaps the most searing critique of the German Catholic hierarchy and the Nazis has come from Guenter Lewy. Drawing on copious unpub lished German sources, Lewy showed that the bishops were largely sup portive of dictatorship, that by 1935 they were diligently trying to find common ground with Nazism, but that in the end they totally misunder stood the nature of Hitler and his movement: "One must conclude," writes Lewy, "that the [Catholic] view of the Nazi regime as merely another con ventional political system was based on unsophisticated political perspec tive" (The Catholic Church in Nazi Germany, p. 169). Finally, note the recent assessment of Klemens von Klemperer. In The German Resistance against Hitler (Oxford, 1992), Klemperer writes that on balance, the churches in Germany took no part in the Widerstand against Hitler (p. 37) . The Ger man Catholics, for their part, were consumed with the need to demon strate their "national" reliability. This patriotic imperative, combined with a fear of communist dictatorship, made it far more politically expedient to equivocate on the issue of National Socialism (p. 38). 22. See letter from H.A.R. to friends, 19 June 1935, "Hapsburg File, 1936-1938," Reinhold Papers, Burns Library. 23. See appendix to letter of Rev. H. A. Reinhold to Bishop W. Bern ing, S.T.D., of Osnabriick, Germany, Reinhold Papers, Burns Library. 24. Joseph Lortz, the distinguished Reformation historian, argued that Catholicism and National Socialism occupied the same ground in opposing the destructive forces within the Weimar Republic, namely, lib eralism, immorality, relativism, atheism, and Bolshevism (Robert Anthony Krieg, C.S.C., Karl Adam: Catholicism in German Culture [Notre Dame,
1992] , P· n5). 25. In a letter to Father Ostermann in March 1936 Reinhold wrote that he subsisted on handouts for about three months in 1935, mostly from American benefactors: "You hardly imagine what an emigrant's life is! One month I spent about 15 (fifteen) Dollars for postage writing letters to all parts of the world to find out a position!" Box "Correspondences, File O," Reinhold Papers, Burns Library. 26. A. Hudal from Rome to "My Lord," 27 May 1935, Box 2: "Corre spondences, 1935-36," Reinhold Papers, Burns Library. 27. Letter from H.A.R. to friends, 19 June 1935, "Hapsburg File, 1936-38," Reinhold Papers, Burns Library. 28. H.A.R., appendix of letter to Berning, Reinhold Papers, Burns Library. 29. Ibid.
448
Notes to Pages 245-247
30. Box 3, "The Cardinal of Vienna," p. 7, n.d. or source where pub lished, Reinhold Papers, Burns Library. 31. Pope Pius XI made it clear that he himself had no responsibility for Innitzer's statements about Hitler. Pius insisted that the cardinal pub licly modify his position on the Nazis. (See Gordon Zahn, "The Unpub lished Encyclical-an Opportunity Missed," National Catholic Reporter 9, no. 8 [15 December 1972] , p. 9.) 32. "The Church in Germany: Kulturkampf or Persecution?" written for The Catholic World, n.d., Box 1, "Manuscripts," Burns Library. Recent scholarship shows that Reinhold's analyses were very accurate. His writ ings, along with those of Konrad Heiden and Waldemar Gurian, were some of the very best contemporary analytical accounts of the activities of Hitler. For example, see "Princeps Huius Saeculii: the Church and Totali tarian Systems," by Johann Hiedler (a.k.a. H.A.R.), and "The Catholic Church in Germany after Four Years of Hitler's Dictatorship," by E. H. R. Lich-Keith (a.k.a. H.A.R.), Box 1, "Manuscripts," Reinhold Papers, Burns Library. Reinhold was the source of much information on German affairs for those who wrote for Commonweal, in particular for George Shuster. 33 . A good example of this can be seen in Leni Riefenstahl's "Tri umph of the Will," a Nazi film documentary on the great Nuremberg ral lies. These gigantic gatherings graphically reveal the extent to which the Nazis went to link their message with ancient Catholic rituals. 34. "Princeps Huius Saeculii," p. 7. 35. "What About Christians in Germany," n.d., Box 1, "Manuscripts," Reinhold Papers, Burns Library. 36. Reinhold's private papers contain numerous personal letters to his friends Don Luigi Sturzo and Waldemar Gurian, for example, where the priest comments extensively on the shocking rise of anti-Semitism even among Catholics and offers his own personal feelings about the matter. (See "Gurian, Waldemar" File, Reinhold Papers, Burns Library. Gurian concurred with Reinhold's sentiments and observations on the issue.) 37. "Let us Fight Anti-Semitism in Our Own Ranks," pp. 6/, n.d., Box 1 "Manuscripts," Reinhold Papers, Bums Library. Reinhold also helped Oesterreicher expand his work into England through his contacts with Donald Attwater, who introduced Oesterreicher and his mission to Father Victor White, John Epstein, and Eric Gill. (See H.A.R. to Attwater, 25 July 1938, "Correspondences, File O," Reinhold Papers, Burns Library.) 38. Reverend Joseph Stang of Colfax, Washington, wrote Reinhold a nasty letter in 1943, suggesting that his liberal ideas were the result of Jewish blood. Reinhold responded to Stang pointing out that he was not
Notes to Pages 24125 0 449
Jewish-though wished it were so, thus sharing the same blood with Christ. Reinhold said that he came to America, in part, to escape the scourge of anti-Semitism, which he had mistakenly thought infected mostly Nazis. He quickly discovered, he informed Rev. Stang, that a hatred ofJews was rife in the U.S., even among the Catholic clergy. (See H.A.R. to Rev. Joseph Stang, n January 1943, Box "Correspondence: Moenius, Stang, et al. File," Reinhold Papers, Burns Library.) Kathleen Hughes in her book on Godfrey Diekmann also makes the mistake ofidentifying Reinhold as Jewish ( The Monk's Tale: A Biography of Godfrey Diekmann, O. S.B. [Collegeville, Minn. , 1991] , p. n3) . Reinhold noted in his autobiography that even as a youngster he had been thought to be a Jew, though this was not the case. 39. Letter from H. A. R. to Waldemar Gurian, 12 September 1936, Box "Correspondence: Gurian File," Reinhold Papers, Burns Library. 40. "The Catholic Church in Germany and Nazi Persecution," by Scrutator (a.k.a. H. A. R.), Box 1, "Manuscripts," Reinhold Papers, Burns Library. Reinhold's assessment was shared by a friend, the Jesuit anti-Nazi Friedrich Muckermann. Muckermann wrote in 1946 that the German Catholic laymen saw much more clearly the dangers of Nazism than did the bishops or academicians (Friedrich Muckermann, S .J. , Der deutsche Weg [Zurich, 1946] , p. 25) . 41. E. Forelicher to Cardinal Hayes, n.d., Box "Correspondence: File F," Reinhold Papers, Burns Library. 42. H.A.R. to Mrs. N. Brady, 13 June 1936, Box "Correspondence: File B," Reinhold Papers, Burns Library. 43. "The Cardinal of Vienna," n.d. or source where published, Box 3, Reinhold Papers, Burns Library. 44. Father Carroll to Sister Adele and Sister Rosemary, St. Francis General Hospital, Pittsburgh, 18 February 1967, Box 6, "Reinhold Estate," Reinhold Papers, Burns Library. 45. There were few Catholic charities at this time in either the United States or Europe where people could turn for sympathy and understand ing, the exception being Holland, where political exiles were given shelter by Catholic Church authorities. 46. "Summary of Conference on Christian German Refugees," 6 Octo ber 1936, "Correspondence: File A," Reinhold Papers, Burns Library. 47. H.A.R. to Frank Ritchie, 6 October 1936, "Correspondence: File A," Reinhold Papers, Burns Library. 48. See appendix of Reinhold letter to Berning.
45 0
Notes to Pages 250-252
49. See George Shuster, "Father Coughlin," n.d., Part I, Box 8, Folder 1, Shuster Archives, University of Notre Dame. 50. The archdiocese of New York at this time required that any vis iting priest who said more than three Masses in any parish or religious house within its jurisdiction report to the chancery office to have his cre dentials approved (See Reinhold, Autobiography, p. 105). 51. See letters of H.A.R. to Mcintyre, Box "Correspondence: Chancery-New York City," Reinhold Papers, Burns Library. 52. H.A.R. to Waldemar Gurian, 12 September 193 6 , Box "Corre spondence: Gurian, Waldemar," Reinhold Papers, Burns Library. 53. See H.A.R. letter to Mcintyre, 13 January 1937, Box "Correspon dence: Chancery-New York City," Reinhold Papers, Burns Library. 54. H .A.R. to Cushing, n January 1937, Box 6 : "Cushing, Septem ber 29, 1936-January 14, 1937,'' Reinhold Papers, Burns Library. 55. Appendix ofletter to Berning, p. 3, and H.A.R. to Friends, 19 June 1935, Box "Correspondence: Hapsburg, 1936-1938," Reinhold Papers, Burns Library. Reinhold's brother tried to convince him to return to Germany in order to settle family business matters. Reinhold decided against it only after Henrich Bruening, the former chancellor of Germany, warned that the Gestapo was waiting to arrest him. See Box 5, "Miscellaneous, My Colorful Uncle," Reinhold Papers, Burns Library. 56. For example, see H.A.R. to Rev. Joseph Ostermann, 12 January 1940; H.A.R. to John }. O'Connor, Catholic News Editor, National Con ference ofJews and Christians, 24 January 1937, Box "Correspondence, File O," and letter of 11 December 1939, "Correspondence, File P and Q,'' Reinhold Papers, Burns Library. Reinhold frequently kept a low profile in his work for refugees. For example, he contacted Father John Lafarge, S.J., in 1938 to see what could be done through the State Department to save the former chancellor of Austria Kurt von Schuschnigg {the State Department had rescued Bru ening from Germany in 1933). Reinhold in this particular instance worked quietly, since, as he told La Farge, he did not want American Church authorities to regard him as an activist {LaFarge to W. Parsons, 23 March 1938, Parsons Papers, Box 6 /America 1938 D-6, Special Collections, George town University) . 57. His scholarship was highly regarded. Hannah Arendt, for in stance, praised Gurian's brief essay on German anti-Semitism in Koppel Pinson, ed., Essays on Antisemitism {New York, 1946) as "outstanding" and "extraordinary," fully reflective of the profundity of thinking that Gurian brought to everything that interested him (Hannah Arendt, "The Per-
Notes to Pages 252-256 45 1
sonality ofWaldemar Gurian," Review ofPolitics, January 1955, p. 34) . In fact, Gurian's analyses of Nazism, Bolshevism, and anti-Semitism were similar to that of Arendt as outlined in her monumental study, The Ori gins of Totalitarianism, 1951. The January 1955 edition of Review ofPolitics is devoted to the career ofWaldemar Gurian. 58. See his Bolshevism as a World Danger (New York, 1935), and Gurian to H.A.R., 19 July 1936, Box "Correspondence: Gurian, Waldemar," Rein hold Papers, Burns Library. 59. Deutschen Briefe, 31 May 1936, quoted in M. A. Fitzsimmons, "Die Deutschen Briefe: Gurian and the German Crisis," Review of Politics, January 1955, p. 62. 60. See M. A. Fitzsimmons' article on Deutschen Briefe in the Review ofPolitics for more on Gurian's work in exile. 61. Waldemar Gurian to H.A.R., 24 May 1937, Box "Correspondence: Gurian, Waldemar," Reinhold Papers, Burns Library. 62. See Waldemar Gurian, "Bolshevism and Anti-Bolshevism," Colosseum, June 1937. 63 . See "Correspondence," Colosseum, September 1937. Gurian was undoubtedly pleased that Bernard Wall, editor of Colosseum, had allowed him to publish in his journal, for the article under review was a criticism ofWall's own philo-fascism. Wall, like Belloc and his circle, had regarded Mussolini as an acceptable partner in the fight for Christianity against the perils of Marxism. It was Wall's contention, for example, that the "Right" was less dangerous than the Left for Christians, since religion and social justice could be achieved under its rule, but never under communism. The fact that Wall permitted contrary views to be published in his journal con vinced Gurian that Wall was not yet a fascist (Gurian to H.A.R., IO March 1937, Box "Correspondence: Gurian, Waldemar," Reinhold Papers, Burns Library). Despite Gurian's liberal positions, Wall collaborated with Father Reinhold in helping him find employment in America. 64. In Gurian's mind, these included George Shuster, whom Gurian believed had taken Bruening's side in their quarrels, Frank Sheed, and Godfried Briefs, among others. (See H.A.R. to Gurian, 1 June 193;r, Gurian to H.A.R., IO March 1937, 19 March 1937, and 29 March 1937, Box "Cor respondence: Gurian, Waldemar," Reinhold Papers, Burns Library.) In frustration, Gurian even lashed out at Father Reinhold at times. (See H.A.R. to Gurian, 18 July 1937.) 65. See Sturzo to P. Meegan, 7 April 1937, Box "Correspondence, S File," Reinhold Papers, Burns Library. 66. H.A.R. to Sturzo, 26 August 1940, Box "Correspondence, S File," Reinhold Papers, Burns Library.
45 2 Notes to Pages 256-26!
67. Reinhold, Autobiography, p. 125. 68. Paul Furfey to Norman McKenna, 30 October 1936, "McKenna Furfey Correspondence," Z-26, Michel Papers, St. John's University. 6 9 . Father Reinhold had studied at Maria Laach. His experiences with the Benedictines had a profound impact on his spiritual growth and were undoubtedly a strong source of Reinhold's liberal social ideas. 70. Mortimer Adler, ''A Christian Educator," Orate Fratres, 22 Janu ary 1939. 71. R. W. Franklin and Robert L. Spaeth, Virgil Michel: American Catholic (Collegeville, Minn., 1988), p. 39. 72. A large number of subscribers were laity, who from the outset, it appears, showed more interest in promoting the liturgy than did the clergy. (See Paul Marx, The Life and Works of Virgil Michel [Washington, D.C., 1957] , p. 126.) According to John Cogley, after Reinhold took over Virgil Michel's column "Timely Tracts," many of the clergy regarded the journal as "downright subversive" for its open-mindedness concerning the use of the vernacular in the Mass. Cogley also wrote that even during the era of John XXIII the liberal magazine Commonweal had to be passed around sur reptitiously in many religious houses and seminaries (John Cogley, A Can terbury Tale, Experiences and Reflections: r9r6-r976 [New York, 1976], p. 72) . 73 . This is a term coined by E. K. Hunt to describe the moral code that governed the Middle Ages. See his Property and Prophets: The Evo lution ofEconomic Institutions and Ideologies, 5th ed. (New York, 1986). 74. Virgil Michel, "The Liturgy: The Basis of Social Regeneration," an address given at the thirty-seventh annual convention of the Minnesota branch of the Central-Verein, Mankato, Minn., September 22-24, 1935, reprinted in Orate Fratres, 2 November 1935, p. 541. 75. Ibid., p. 543. 76. Virgil Michel quoting Christopher Dawson, ibid., p. 545. 77. Marx, Life and Works of Virgil Michel, p. 92. 78. This sentiment continues to be a source of contention among American Catholics. See Peter Steinfels, "Latin Mass at St. Patrick's Brings Conservative Discontents to the Fore," New York Times, 12 May 1996. 79 . H. A. Reinhold, for instance, wrote his English friend Arthur Gannon that he had a "bitter experience with the American Irish clergy" because of his liberal views (H.A.R. to Gannon, 8 May 1936, File "Cor respondence: Arthur Gannon," Reinhold Papers, Burns Library) . 80. Clifford Howell to H.A.R., 5 June 1948, Box "Correspondence: Howell, Clifford, S .J. ," Reinhold Papers, Burns Library. 81. Helen Angela Hurley, On Good Ground (Minneapolis, Minn., 1951), p. 261, quoted in Franklin and Spaeth, Virgil Michel, p. 62.
Notes to Pages 26!-2 6 2 453
82. Father Michel, for example, waged an ardent campaign against the distortions of Catholic social teachings produced by some of the more popular Catholic catechisms on communism. (See his letter to Catholic Worker, n.d., "Virgil Michel" file, W-2.2, Box 2, Dorothy Day/Catholic Worker Papers, Marquette University.) 83 . Stanley Vishnewski, "Days of Action," p. 3, unpublished MSS, W-12.3, Box l , Dorothy Day/Catholic Worker Papers, Marquette Uni versity. 84. Ibid., p. 5. 85. Early leaders of what was called "New Social Catholicism" in cluded Virgil Michel, Dorothy Day, Richard Deverall, John Lafarge, S.J. , Norman McKenna, Father James Gillis, and Rev. Paul Hanley Furfey, among others. 86. Norman McKenna to Paul Furfey, 12 November 1936, "McKenna Furfey Correspondences," Z-26, Virgil Michel Papers, St. John's University. 87. Virgil Michel, "The Fight against Communism," Orate Fratres, 24 January 1937· 88. For Michel's embrace ofDistributism and what he regarded as the virtues of its programs see his "Timely Tracts: On Social Environment," Orate Fratres, 15 May 1938; "Timely Tracts: City or Farm," 12 June 1938; and his Christian Social Reconstruction (Milwaukee, 1937), p. 121. 89. Attwater was lay editor of Caldey Abbey's Pax, an English Bene dictine publication, and its Notes ofthe Month. He also was well known for his translations of the principal works of the Russian philosopher Nicholas
Berdyaev. 90. Marx, Life and Works of Virgil Michel, p. n8. 91. Eric Gill, claimed Ed Turner, the author of an unpublished biog raphy of Peter Maurin, was the best exemplar ofMaurin's economic ideals. Gill was the man Maurin most liked to paraphrase. In making a collec tion of Maurin's condensations and paraphrases from other writers' works (Maurin's "Easy Essays," printed over the years in the Catholic Worker), Turner found that of fifty-one of these essays some thirteen were based on works by Eric Gill, and these ran to over seventy-seven pages. Maurin had eight notebooks of material on the work of Eric Gill ("Typescript of Unpublished Book on Peter Maurin" by Ed Turner, n.d., pp. 16-19, Box 4, W-ro, Dorothy Day/Catholic Worker Papers, Mar quette University) . 92. Dorothy Day to Brendan O'Grady, n.d., probably June or July 1954, "General Correspondence-Outgoing," Box l, W-2, Dorothy Day/ Catholic Worker Papers, Marquette University. 93. Arthur Sheehan, Gay Believer (Garden City, N.Y. , 1959), p. 12.
454
Notes to Pages 263-267 94. Stanley Vishnewski, "Intended Article on the C atholic Worker Movement," p. 12, B ox 4, W-123 , Dorothy Day/Catholic Worker Papers, Marquette University. 95. Marx, Life and Works of Virgil Michel, p. 374. 96. Maritain to Peter Maurin, 17 November 1934, W-ro, B ox l, "Peter Maurin Correspondence," Dorothy Day/Catholic Worker Papers, Mar quette University. 97. In launching the
Christian Front, McKenna said that the venture
"won't be any intellectual stuffed shirt affair which has to be read with a dictionary in one hand. Our writers are men of action, as well as men of ideas, and it is to a similar type of reader that we appeal for support" (Nor man McKenna to John Fortier, 22 November 1935, "McKenna-Furfey Correspondence," B ox Z-26, Virgil Michel Papers, St. John's Univer sity) . McKenna's group initiated their proj ect in p art to combat the philo fascism of Coughlin's followers. 98. An excellent study of Kenkel and his ideas can be found in Philip
Gleason,
The Conservative Reformers: German-American Catholics and the Social Order (Notre Dame, Ind. , 1968).
9 9 . Michel's personal p apers at St. John's University contain numer ous correspondences with Reckitt and the Christendom Anglicans . roo. See the Association Contract, 15 October 1936, p. 1, The Service
Bulletinfar the Members ofthe Minnesota and South Dakota Retail Hardware Associations. Maurin's visit to St. John's was a great success. Peter wrote Dorothy Day that he found a very receptive audience for his radical ideas (Peter Maurin to Dorothy Day, r9 January 193 6 , Box l , W-ro, "Peter Mau rin Correspondence," Dorothy D ay/Catholic Worker Papers, Marquette University) . 102. Bishop Joseph Busch to Virgil Michel, 15 February 1935, B ox IOI.
Z-27, Virgil Michel Papers, St. John's University. Bishop Busch wrote to the prior of St. John's Abbey that before any lectures were delivered at the Institute an outline should be forwarded to him first for prior approval. 103 . See letters to Virgil Michel from Henry J. Blenker, 26 October 1936 and n December 1 93 6 , B ox Z-3 2 , Virgil Michel Papers, St. John's University. 104. Michel wrote to his friend Dorothy Day, who regularly weath ered the assaults of reactionary Catholics, that he was also under attack for his radical p amphlets, but that he could console himself with the "good company" he was in, and "in that I include the Catholic Worker, and above all our common Head Christ" ( Virgil Michel to Catholic Worker, 5 Octo-
Notes to Pages 26;271 455
her 1935, Box 2, W-2.2, Dorothy Day/Catholic Worker Papers, Marquette University) . 105. Franklin and Spaeth, Virgil Michel, pp. 92-93. 106. Besides his relationships with Heinrich Bruening, Gurian, and Sturzo, Reinhold also was personal friends with Jacques and Raissa Mari tain and Helene Iswolsky. IOJ. Warren G. Bovee, "H. A. R., Front Line Fighter," Today, December 1954, pp. 4-5. 108. "Dom Virgil Michel's Columns," Orate Fratres, 19 March 1939, p. 224. 109. For instance, he went much further than Father Michel in call ing for changes in the Eucharistic feast and the introduction of vernacu lar in ritual, and in recommending Saturday evening Mass for those who had difficulty attending Sunday services. He also made unabashed criti cisms of the horrible state of religious art and architecture. Father Emeric Lawrence, for example, wrote that Reinhold could become violent when ever cheapness and artificiality offended good taste, and it was the brash ness of his opinions that usually angered his opponents (including many bishops) rather than the criticisms themselves, for nearly everyone real ized that he was probably right, being one of the most scholarly authori ties on such matters (Emeric Lawrence, "H. A. R.-Death of a Friend," Commonweal, 8 March 1968). no. Virgil Michel was far less combative than Reinhold, and in fact was noted for doing anything possible to avoid controversy. nr. This experiment turned out to be highly successful. It was an
example of what Donald Attwater called a Distributist "cell of good liv ing," where arts and crafts and self-sufficient agriculture were encouraged as counterforces to industrial capitalism. n2. The comments of Michael F. McNeil, who was himself a former communist. n3. From Virgil Michel's unpublished diary, entry for 13 April 1938, p. 13, Virgil Michel Papers, St. John's University. n4. Ibid., pp. 15-16. n5. See H .A. R., "Inroads of the Bourgeois Spirit," intended for Commonweal, 1941, Box 3, Reinhold Papers, Burns Library. n6. Reckitt and the Anglican social activists were also great sup porters of the Roman Catholic liturgical movement. See Maurice Reckitt, "Anglo-Catholic Aspects," Colosseum, December 19371q H. A. Reinhold, "Timely Tract: Nature Mirrors Supernature," Worship, 28 December 194!.
45 6 Notes to Page 273
Chapter
n.
American Catholics Move to the Right
1. Francis X. Talbot, S .J. , played a seminal role in the American Catholic literary revival in the 1930s and 1940s. He was one of the founders of America, where he served as literary editor from 1923 to 1936 and then editor-in-chief from 1936 to 1944· He also was editor of the Catholic Mind from 1936 to 1944, one of the founders of Thought, the Catholic journal of ideas, and editor of Thought between 1936 and 1940. In 1928 Talbot founded the Catholic Book Club and in 1930 the Catholic Poetry Society, and he was president of Loyola College, Baltimore, from 1947 to 1950. His career with America and his important contributions to Catholic literary culture are covered well in Arnold Sparr, To Promote, Defend, and Redeem:
The Catholic Literary Revival and the Cultural Traniformation ofAmerican Catholicism, I920-I960 (New York, 1990). Father Talbot was hypersensitive to communism. He especially ob jected to the use of art as propaganda, which seemed to be the trend by the 1930s as various writers pursued radical social agendas through literary channels. Talbot had particularly strong views on Catholic culture and litera ture, and he did much to break down Catholic provincialism in America through the creation of the "Gallery of Living Catholic Authors." Tal bot, however, was very thin-skinned when Catholics criticized the Church for any reason. It was because of this that he first crossed swords with Reinhold's friend George N. Shuster. In The Catholic Spirit in Modern English Literature (New York, 1922) , Shuster pronounced the bulk of American Catholic fiction inferior as literature because of its pious and sentimental bent. Talbot responded strongly in an unprecedented long review entitled " 'The Catholic Spirit' in Literature," America 27 (15 July 1922) : 304-305. He argued that Shuster had slighted Catholic literary accomplishments just when American Catholics needed a better sense of their cultural successes. This literary disagreement was the first step in a long struggle, culminating in an open break over the Spanish Civil War. For an excellent treatment of Shuster's career see Thomas E. Blantz, C.S.C., George N. Shuster: On the Side ofTruth (Notre Dame, Ind., 1993). An informative and far-reaching discussion of the Jesuits in the United States and their magazine America can be found in Peter McDonough, Men Astutely Trained.· A History oftheJesuits in theAmerican Century (New York, 1992). 2. Having earned a Ph.D. from the College of St. Jean Berchmans in Louvain in 1910, Parsons went on to help found the journal Thought and then served as editor-in-chief of that publication as well as America
Notes to Pages 273-274 457
from 1925 to 1936. After leaving America he was appointed a professor at Georgetown University and became dean of the Graduate School in 1938. He was an important figure in the American Political Science Association and a prolific writer on American social and political issues as well as inter national relations. Parsons had the distinction ofbeing appointed the first Jesuit to serve on the regular faculty at the Catholic University of America. 3. Radio Talk, n.d., Box l, A-3 4 , America !Parsons Papers, Special Collections, Georgetown University. 4. "The Rights of the Worker according to the Encyclical '